In the heart of Tehran – a city protected by the Middle East’s densest air defense system, thousands of surveillance cameras, and Revolutionary Guard forces ready to react in seconds – the unimaginable happened.
In the early morning of February 28, 2026, while the world was still asleep, US B-2 stealth bombers and Israeli F-35s ripped through the Iranian skies without any prior detection. This wasn’t just a conventional airstrike – it was a devastating “decapitation” attack:
Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei was killed in his supposedly impenetrable hideout.
Top IRGC generals, including Intelligence Minister Esmail Khatib and close advisor Ali Larijani, fell one after another within 48 hours.

A series of key military targets right in the heart of Tehran – from the IRGC headquarters in the southeast to government buildings – were hit by precision bombs, turning seemingly impregnable fortresses into rubble in just hours.
Iran boasts a multi-layered air defense network, Russian radar, and early detection systems from all directions. Yet the US-Israel alliance accomplished what many experts had called a “mission impossible”: penetrating thousands of kilometers deep, evading all warning systems, and delivering a fatal blow to the very heart of the regime’s power.
The result?

More than 1,300 people were killed in the first few days of Operation Epic Fury.
Iran retaliated with hundreds of missiles and drones, but most were intercepted by Iron Dome and the US-Israel defense system.
World oil prices have soared, the Strait of Hormuz is shaking, and Tehran is plunged into chaos not seen since the 1979 Islamic Revolution.
This is not just an airstrike – it is a declaration: “Nowhere on Iranian soil is safe anymore.”
Will this be the final blow to the Tehran regime, or merely the beginning of a protracted, all-out war? The answer is being written in the smoke and flames of the Middle Eastern skies right now.

