In a devastating double blow to the U.S.-led coalition, a U.S. Air Force KC-135 Stratotanker refuelling plane has been downed over western Iraq, while a French soldier was killed in a fierce rocket and drone attack on a NATO base in Erbil.
Iran-backed Iraqi militias, operating under the banner of the “Islamic Resistance,” proudly claimed responsibility for shooting down the KC-135 using advanced surface-to-air missiles. The aircraft was on a critical refuelling mission supporting long-range bombers conducting strikes inside Iran as part of Operation Epic Fury. U.S. Central Command confirmed the loss but stopped short of detailing the cause, only stating that search and rescue operations are underway.

Just hours later, a coordinated barrage slammed into coalition facilities at Erbil International Airport and nearby NATO outposts in Iraqi Kurdistan. A French soldier was killed and several others wounded in the ᴀssault, marking the first confirmed combat death of a French serviceman in the expanding conflict.
These back-to-back incidents expose the dangerous reality facing American and allied forces. With the USS Gerald R. Ford still crippled by recurring fires and the USS Abraham Lincoln under repeated Iranian threats, the loss of yet another vital refuelling jet severely undermines the U.S. ability to sustain its air campaign. America has already burned through more than $11 billion in munitions in the first week alone, while at least ten major radar systems across the region remain destroyed.
Despite weeks of intense bombardment, Supreme Leader Mojtaba Khamenei’s regime continues to show remarkable resilience. Iranian missiles and Hezbollah rockets continue raining down on Israel, while Iranian forces have turned the Strait of Hormuz into a war zone with repeated attacks on commercial shipping.

The death of a French soldier adds a troubling international dimension, raising fears that more NATO allies could be dragged deeper into the conflict — or begin questioning their involvement.
What began as a confident operation to swiftly neutralize Iran is rapidly turning into a bloody, expensive war of attrition. As another American aircraft lies smoldering in the Iraqi desert and European blood is spilled on coalition soil, serious doubts are growing about the sustainability of Operation Epic Fury.
How many more aircraft must fall? How many more allied lives must be lost before Washington admits this campaign is spiraling out of control?
The war is no longer just America’s fight — and the costs are rising fast.