In a scene of harrowing bravery and cinematic intensity, the USS Fitzgerald (DDG 62) has reportedly become the center of a firestorm in the North Arabian Sea. Amidst a wave of relentless Iranian saturation attacks involving “kamikaze” drones and anti-ship cruise missiles, the Arleigh Burke-class destroyer was reportedly struck, with eyewitness accounts and infrared satellite feeds suggesting the vessel “burned like a torch” after a direct hit to its midships.

However, despite the raging inferno on her decks, the ship’s legendary resilience was on full display. Even as smoke billowed into the night sky, the Fitzgerald’s Aegis Combat System remained operational, and her Vertical Launching System (VLS) cells were seen erupting in a defiant counter-response.

In a “death-grip” retaliation, the Fitzgerald launched a full-capacity barrage of Tomahawk Land Attack Missiles and SM-6 interceptors, with her missiles already streaking across the horizon toward Iranian coastal launch sites while the crew battled the flames on board. Military analysts are calling this the “Ghost of 2017” moment—referencing the ship’s history of surviving catastrophic damage—but this time in the heat of active combat.

Pentagon sources have yet to confirm the total extent of the casualties, but they emphasize that the Fitzgerald “refused to go down without dealing a lethal blow,” successfully neutralizing the very batteries that targeted her. As the ship continues to fight for survival, the image of a burning U.S. destroyer firing its last remaining missiles is quickly becoming the defining symbol of the escalating regional war.