In a development that could dramatically shift the balance of power in the Persian Gulf, U.S. intelligence officials are scrambling to ᴀssess reports that China has supplied Iran with its ᴅᴇᴀᴅly YJ-12 supersonic anti-ship missiles — the feared “carrier killer” capable of traveling at Mach 3 and designed specifically to destroy large warships like American aircraft carriers.

According to sources familiar with the matter, advanced YJ-12 systems have already reached IRGC naval units operating along Iran’s southern coast and islands near the Strait of Hormuz. Iranian state media hinted at the new capability Wednesday, releasing footage of what appeared to be a high-speed missile test and warning that “any American carrier entering our waters will face weapons they have never encountered before.”
The timing is explosive. The USS Abraham Lincoln, recently rushed into the theater to support the battered USS Gerald R. Ford, is already facing Iranian claims of direct hits and damage. With the Ford still suffering recurring fires and limited flight operations, the arrival of China’s YJ-12 would significantly raise the threat level to America’s most valuable naval ᴀssets.
The YJ-12 is no ordinary missile. Launched from land, air, or sea platforms, its supersonic speed and sea-skimming flight profile make it extremely difficult to intercept — especially as U.S. radar networks in the Gulf have been heavily degraded, with at least ten major systems destroyed by previous Iranian strikes.

This potential Chinese intervention marks a dangerous new phase in Operation Epic Fury. America has already spent more than $11 billion on munitions in the first week alone. Munitions stockpiles are critically low, Israel remains under relentless attack from Iranian ballistic missiles and Hezbollah rockets, and Iranian forces continue turning the Strait of Hormuz into a war zone with repeated tanker strikes.
If Beijing has indeed transferred the YJ-12, it would represent a major escalation — effectively arming Iran with one of the world’s most advanced anti-carrier weapons while China stays officially on the sidelines. Analysts warn this could force the U.S. Navy into a far more defensive posture, further limiting its ability to project power.
President Trump and the Pentagon have remained silent on the reports so far, but behind closed doors, the implications are being treated with utmost seriousness. Is Operation Epic Fury about to face its greatest challenge yet — not just from Iran, but from the combined technological reach of the Russia-China-Iran axis?
What started as a swift campaign to neutralize the Iranian threat is rapidly evolving into a proxy superpower confrontation with enormous global consequences. As the shadow of China’s carrier-killer missiles looms over the Gulf, America may soon face an uncomfortable choice: escalate dramatically or accept the limits of its overstretched military power.
The stakes have never been higher.
