In a shocking new twist in the Iran War, Tehran has boldly claimed it has successfully damaged the USS Abraham Lincoln — America’s second most powerful aircraft carrier now operating in the Arabian Sea as a critical replacement for the crippled USS Gerald R. Ford.

IRGC commanders released dramatic footage and satellite images Thursday showing what they say is thick black smoke rising from the flight deck of the Nimitz-class supercarrier. According to Iranian military spokesmen, a coordinated swarm of advanced drones and anti-ship missiles penetrated the Lincoln’s defensive screen during night operations, scoring multiple hits on the deck and superstructure. “The second American aircraft carrier has been hit and burned,” they declared, calling it “another historic victory for the Axis of Resistance.”
The Pentagon quickly pushed back, admitting only “minor damage from a drone attack” while insisting the carrier remains fully combat capable. However, flight tracking data shows a sudden sharp reduction in air operations from the Lincoln, raising questions about the true extent of the damage.
This development is deeply concerning. The Abraham Lincoln was rushed into the theater to reinforce U.S. naval power after the Ford suffered repeated fires and was forced to limit flight operations. With America already burning through more than $11 billion in munitions during the first week of Operation Epic Fury, the prospect of a second carrier being compromised sends alarm bells ringing across Washington and allied capitals.

Meanwhile, Israel continues to suffer under relentless Iranian and Hezbollah barrages, while Iranian forces have turned the Strait of Hormuz into a dangerous war zone, repeatedly attacking commercial tankers. U.S. radar networks in the Gulf remain degraded, and several American aircraft have been lost over Iraq.
Is Iran’s claim exaggerated propaganda, or has Mojtaba Khamenei’s regime just landed another humiliating blow against the world’s most powerful navy?
As two U.S. supercarriers now face serious challenges in the same theater, the narrative of overwhelming American dominance under Operation Epic Fury is cracking. The war that was supposed to be quick and decisive is rapidly becoming a dangerous, expensive test of endurance — one that may be exposing the limits of U.S. military power in real time.
The world is watching closely. Another carrier in distress could change everything.
