In a heart-stopping confrontation on day 47 of the 2026 US-Iran war, five Iranian Revolutionary Guard fast attack boats launched a desperate suicide run against a U.S. aircraft carrier strike group in the Strait of Hormuz — coming terrifyingly close to triggering a full-scale naval catastrophe.
The small but heavily armed IRGC vessels, packed with anti-ship missiles and explosives, sped directly toward the carrier formation in what U.S. officials described as a clear kamikaze-style ᴀssault. For 90 tense seconds, the situation hung on a knife’s edge as the boats closed distance at high speed.

The response was swift and overwhelming. U.S. warships opened fire with 30mm Bushmaster cannons, Hellfire missiles from MH-60 helicopters, and deck-mounted machine guns. All five Iranian boats were obliterated in a hail of precision fire before they could launch a single effective weapon. Burning wreckage and fuel slicks now mark the spot where the attack ended almost as quickly as it began.
U.S. Central Command called the engagement “a textbook demonstration of American naval superiority,” noting that the carrier group maintained full operational capability with zero damage or casualties on the American side.
This latest failed Iranian gamble comes just one day after Tehran debuted its feared Sejjil-3 “Doomsday” missile against Israel and follows weeks of heavy losses: 125 Shahed drones destroyed on the ground by three MQ-9 Reapers, repeated bunker-buster strikes on coastal missile sites, and the destruction of multiple warships and fast boats.

The U.S. maintains mᴀssive force in the region with a full carrier strike group, F-35 squadrons, the USS Tripoli, and over 10,000 elite troops on station. President Donald Trump stated bluntly: “They tried. They failed. Iran’s navy is being dismantled piece by piece.”
Brent crude remains above $124 per barrel as the Strait of Hormuz stays under firm U.S. control.
Iran’s leadership appears increasingly desperate, resorting to high-risk, low-success attacks as American dominance in the Gulf grows stronger by the day.
The situation remains highly volatile.
