
At 4:11 a.m. in the Red Sea, the US Navy quietly deployed a weapon Iran was never supposed to know existed. What happened next changed everything.
Iran spent 7 years and $1.7 billion building the perfect attack — a modified stealth submarine, sea-skimming missiles flying at 8 meters, and a dual-axis distraction designed to break Arleigh Burke intercept doctrine from the inside. The geometry was flawless. The simulations gave them an 84% success probability. And then the USS Gravely said one word.

This is the full breakdown of how the engagement unfolded, what “Triton” actually is, why Iran’s entire naval deterrence strategy is now built on math that stopped being accurate at 0417:51 — and what’s already being tested in a building in Dahlgren, Virginia that doesn’t appear on any public organizational chart.
