In a humiliating failure that has left the Iranian regime in panic, Iran launched its largest missile ᴀssault to date — firing over 400 ballistic and cruise missiles in coordinated waves toward US forces and allied positions in the Persian Gulf and Israel. Yet almost none got through.
Advanced US Navy Aegis destroyers escorting the USS Abraham Lincoln carrier group, combined with Israeli Arrow-3 and David’s Sling systems, intercepted the vast majority of incoming threats. American F-35 stealth fighters and electronic warfare aircraft jammed Iranian guidance systems mid-flight, while Patriot batteries on the ground mopped up the few that leaked through. The result: a spectacular defensive success with minimal damage reported on the coalition side.

Iranian state media had hyped the attack as “the final blow” that would overwhelm American defenses and avenge recent devastating losses. Instead, Tehran is now reeling from another embarrᴀssing defeat. The regime’s missile stockpile, already severely degraded after US B-1B Lancers destroyed the secret underground mega-fortress and GBU-72 strikes wiped out Hajiabad — Iran’s last missile city — proved far less effective than boasted.
This mᴀssive failure follows a string of crushing setbacks for Iran: the destruction of Bandar Abbas port by B-2 Spirit bombers, the elimination of Kharg Island infrastructure by MQ-9 drones, the F-35 strike on its key nuclear facility, the Rangers raid on its mountain tank production site, and the bold US Marine amphibious ᴀssault that seized key positions in the Strait of Hormuz. Even Iran’s desperate J-7 cluster bomb attack on a Jerusalem airport and earlier strikes on Israeli military headquarters have only accelerated its collapse.
US Central Command stated the attack was “anticipated and decisively defeated,” praising the seamless integration of American, Israeli, and naval defense systems. Military analysts say Iran’s missile program is now in tatters, with production capacity shattered and launchers increasingly vulnerable.

The Iranian regime’s strategy of escalation through sheer volume has been exposed as futile against modern, layered defenses. Each failed attack further weakens their remaining capabilities and isolates them internationally.
America and Israel continue to demonstrate unmatched military superiority and ironclad resolve. Aggression against US forces or our allies will be met with overwhelming defensive strength followed by even stronger counterstrikes. The free world is winning — and Iran is running out of options.
This dramatic failure is still developing. Further updates will follow as damage ᴀssessments and potential US responses are finalized.
