In a devastating blow to American forces, Iran has unleashed a mᴀssive coordinated missile and drone ᴀssault on U.S. military installations across Iraq and Syria, injuring at least 200 American soldiers in what is emerging as one of the worst single-day casualty events for the U.S. in the ongoing conflict.

The Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) launched waves of ballistic missiles and suicide drones targeting key coalition bases, including Al Asad Airbase in Iraq and several forward operating posts in eastern Syria. Explosions ripped through barracks, logistics depots, and aircraft hangars, leaving dozens of U.S. troops wounded by shrapnel and blast effects. Medical teams are working around the clock to treat the injured, with several reported in critical condition.
In a rare moment of candor, President Trump admitted the scale of the attack caught his administration off guard. “We knew they would try something, but the intensity surprised us,” Trump said during an emergency briefing. “We are responding forcefully.”
The strike highlights the growing effectiveness of Iran’s asymmetric warfare under Supreme Leader Mojtaba Khamenei. Despite weeks of heavy U.S.-Israeli bombardment under Operation Epic Fury, Tehran continues to strike back with precision, targeting American personnel directly while avoiding full-scale conventional confrontation.

This latest escalation comes as the U.S. military is already under severe strain. Both the USS Gerald R. Ford and USS Abraham Lincoln remain limited by repeated damage and fires. America has burned through more than $11 billion in munitions in just two weeks, with critical radar systems destroyed across the region and interceptor stockpiles running dangerously low.
As images of wounded American soldiers circulate and the human cost of the war becomes impossible to hide, many are beginning to question whether Operation Epic Fury has not only failed to break Iran, but is now exacting an unbearable toll on U.S. forces.
The war that was promised as swift and decisive is turning into a painful war of attrition — and American troops are paying the price.
