In a powerful new demonstration of strength and speed, Iran has launched a mᴀssive barrage of solid-fuel ballistic missiles targeting U.S. and Israeli positions across the region, delivering what the IRGC describes as “devastating and precise” strikes.
The Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps confirmed the operation involved advanced solid-fuel missiles, including the hypersonic-capable Fattah-2 and Emad variants. These missiles, known for their rapid launch capability and difficult-to-intercept trajectories, rained down on multiple high-value targets. Israeli airbases at Nevatim, Ramat David, and Palmachim were hit hard once again, with significant damage reported to runways, hangars, and aircraft shelters. Explosions also struck areas near the Shin Bet intelligence headquarters in Tel Aviv and several U.S. military facilities in Iraq and eastern Syria.

IRGC spokesman Brigadier General Hossein Salami declared: “The solid-fuel barrage was only a sample of our true power. More attacks are coming — stronger, faster, and ᴅᴇᴀᴅlier — until the American and Zionist aggression ends.”
This latest ᴀssault comes as Operation Epic Fury faces growing crisis. The USS Gerald R. Ford remains crippled by repeated fires, while the USS Abraham Lincoln is reportedly withdrawing after Iranian claims of direct hits. America has already burned through more than $11 billion in munitions in the first week alone, with critical THAAD and Patriot interceptor stocks dangerously depleted and multiple advanced radar systems lying in ruins across the Gulf.
Solid-fuel technology gives Iran a major tactical edge — missiles can be launched with almost no warning, overwhelming already strained Israeli and American defenses. As Hezbollah continues coordinated rocket attacks from Lebanon, Israel’s air defense systems are struggling to cope with the sheer volume and velocity of incoming threats.

Supreme Leader Mojtaba Khamenei’s regime has proven remarkably resilient despite weeks of heavy U.S.-Israeli bombardment. Instead of collapsing, Iran is escalating with more sophisticated weaponry and bolder tactics, while turning the Strait of Hormuz into a war zone and successfully targeting commercial shipping.
What Washington promised would be a quick, decisive victory is rapidly collapsing into a costly war of attrition. With U.S. resources stretched thin and Israel burning under repeated barrages, the question grows louder by the hour: How much longer can America and Israel sustain this fight against an Iran that refuses to break — and keeps striking harder?
The solid-fuel missiles are flying. And Tehran has already promised: more attacks are coming.
