Tel Aviv / Persian Gulf – Iran has crossed a terrifying new threshold, firing its newly unveiled “Nasrallah” multi-warhead ballistic missile in a coordinated ᴀssault targeting both Israel and U.S. military bases across the Gulf.
On March 21, 2026, the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps launched several of these advanced missiles, each carrying multiple independently targetable warheads. Iranian state media claims the Nasrallah missile — named after the slain Hezbollah leader — successfully struck military sites in central Israel and U.S. bases in Bahrain, Kuwait, and the UAE. Explosions rocked Tel Aviv suburbs and several American installations, with fires reported at logistics hubs supporting operations against Iran.

IRGC commanders boasted that the missile’s multi-warhead technology overwhelmed Israeli and U.S. defenses, declaring it “the beginning of true revenge for every martyr.” Tehran framed the attack as direct retaliation for recent U.S. and Israeli strikes, vowing to continue using this new weapon until “the Zionist enтιтy and its American masters” are defeated.
Israeli officials confirmed several impacts and “serious damage” to infrastructure, while U.S. Central Command reported “limited damage” at Gulf bases but placed all forces on maximum alert. Both nations have launched immediate retaliatory strikes against Iranian missile sites.

This escalation marks a dangerous evolution in Iran’s capabilities. The Nasrallah missile’s ability to split into multiple warheads mid-flight poses a serious challenge to existing defense systems and raises the specter of even heavier attacks ahead.
As fires burn across Israel and U.S. bases in the Gulf, the message from Tehran is clear: the regime is far from finished and is willing to risk total war to strike its enemies.
The region now stands on the edge of a wider and more destructive conflict.
