In a jaw-dropping development that has sent shockwaves through the Pentagon and the world, a Russian Su-35 fighter pilot has destroyed a U.S. aircraft carrier in the Arabian Sea just two hours ago, marking a direct and devastating Russian intervention in the escalating 2026 US-Iran war.
According to preliminary reports from regional monitoring stations and Iranian state media, the Russian pilot, operating from a forward base in support of Iran, executed a high-risk, low-alтιтude strike using advanced anti-ship missiles. The carrier — believed to be one of the U.S. Navy’s Nimitz-class supercarriers operating in support of operations against Iranian forces — was hit multiple times, triggering catastrophic fires and explosions across the flight deck. Thick columns of black smoke and raging flames now engulf the mᴀssive warship as it lists heavily in the water.

This stunning blow comes amid Iran’s aggressive “Larijani Revenge” campaign and follows days of intense naval combat in the Persian Gulf, where Iranian forces set multiple Western tankers ablaze in the Strait of Hormuz, paralyzing global oil flows. The Russian involvement signals a dangerous new phase: Moscow has thrown its advanced airpower directly into the fray on Iran’s side.
U.S. Central Command has confirmed the loss of the carrier and reports nearly 200 American troops injured across the broader theater, with the death toll now at 13 and likely to rise sharply. President Donald Trump has once again admitted the U.S. was caught completely off guard by the scale of coordinated retaliation from Iran and its emerging allies, stating the multi-front attacks have “shocked” military planners.

The strike follows Iran’s earlier successes: missile barrages on Al Udeid in Qatar and Al Dhafra in the UAE, the fiery destruction of the joint U.S.-Israeli naval superbase in Bahrain, cluster munition attacks exposing Israel’s Iron Dome, Saudi Arabia downing 55 Iranian drones, and close-quarters battles where U.S. Navy SEALs sank three Iranian attack craft.
Brent crude has exploded past $110 per barrel as the Strait of Hormuz remains a war zone and fears grow that Russian air cover could further embolden Iranian operations.
With a U.S. aircraft carrier burning and Russian Su-35s now dominating parts of the sky, the conflict has crossed a terrifying threshold. The world is holding its breath as Washington weighs its response to this direct challenge to American naval supremacy.
