In a jaw-dropping escalation that has sent shockwaves through the Pentagon and global markets, a mᴀssive fire has erupted aboard the USS Gerald R. Ford — the world’s largest and most advanced aircraft carrier — shortly after Iran’s new Supreme Leader Mojtaba Khamenei issued a chilling vow of revenge.
Mojtaba, who ᴀssumed power days after his father Ayatollah Ali Khamenei was killed in the opening strikes of Operation Epic Fury, delivered a fiery message through state media: “The Great Satan and its Zionist allies will taste the full wrath of the Islamic Republic. Every drop of Iranian blood will be avenged — your warships will burn.”

Hours later, the Ford, operating in the Arabian Sea as the centerpiece of U.S. naval power in the region, came under attack. Eyewitness reports and satellite imagery show thick black smoke billowing from the flight deck of the 100,000-ton supercarrier. U.S. Navy officials confirm a “significant fire” following what sources describe as a coordinated swarm of Iranian drones and possibly anti-ship missiles that overwhelmed defensive systems. At least two F/A-18 Super Hornets appear damaged or destroyed on deck, with flight operations suspended.
The incident marks the most serious direct hit on a U.S. capital ship in decades. Damage control teams are battling the blaze amid reports of casualties, though exact numbers remain classified. The Ford, which had been launching relentless airstrikes into Iran, was forced to alter course and is now escorted by a heavy screen of destroyers.
This strike comes as Israel continues to reel from repeated IRGC barrages, including the fourth wave in 24 hours that targeted airbases and intelligence facilities. Iran’s resilience — despite the loss of its top leader, naval fleet, and nuclear sites — is proving far greater than Washington anticipated.

Defense analysts are sounding alarms. “Hitting a carrier like the Ford isn’t just symbolic,” one retired admiral told media outlets. “It shows Iran still possesses the capability to reach out and touch the most protected ᴀssets in the U.S. arsenal.”
With America already burning through $11 billion in munitions in the first week and critical interceptor stocks running low, the attack raises urgent questions: Has Operation Epic Fury awakened a sleeping giant rather than slaying it? Can the U.S. sustain a two-front naval and air campaign while protecting its crown jewel of naval power?
President Trump and Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth have promised a “devastating response,” but behind closed doors, concerns are mounting about escalation, the safety of other vessels in the Gulf, and the risk of the Strait of Hormuz being fully blocked.
The images of the burning Ford — once a floating fortress projecting unchallenged American dominance — are now circling the globe. What was sold as a swift campaign of dominance is rapidly turning into a dangerous war of attrition.
Iran’s message is unmistakable: its fury is not endless — it is precise, patient, and now reaching the heart of U.S. power at sea.
The world holds its breath. One carrier on fire. One superpower tested. The next move could ignite the entire region.
