đĽ Iran War: IRGCâs Fattah, Khorramshahr Slam Into US Gulf Bases? Tehranâs 23rd Wave Of Strikes.hl

Iranâs Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps has unleashed what it calls its 23rd wave of retaliation in the war, firing nextâgeneration Fattah hypersonic and heavy Khorramshahr ballistic missiles at US bases scattered across the Gulf, defence officials say.
Just after 2:00 a.m. local time, sirens screamed over Qatar, the UAE, Kuwait and Saudi Arabia as radars picked up launches from western and southern Iran. Patriot, THAAD and Aegis systems roared into action, streaks of white exhaust cutting across the night as batteries tried to swat down missiles diving in at extreme speed and steep angles.

Early á´ssessments say most of the salvo was intercepted, but not all. At least one Khorramshahrâclass warhead detonated near a logistics yard linked to Al Udeid Air Base in Qatar, flipping vehicles and shredding warehouses. In the UAE, debris from a suspected Fattah strike slammed into a fuel storage area serving a joint USâEmirati facility, igniting tanks and sending a column of black smoke over the coast. Kuwait and Saudi Arabia report âlimited penetrationsâ near training areas and support compounds, with multiple US and coalition troops wounded.
Tehran is hailing the operation as proof its âmonster missilesâ can still reach Americaâs forward fortresses despite days of USâIsraeli air raids on Iranian launch sites. US Central Command counters that defences âperformed under intense pressure,â but privately concedes that Fattahâs manoeuvring flight path and the Khorramshahrâs má´ssive payloads are stretching interception systems to their limits.

As daylight reveals scorched depots, cratered yards and nervous troops filing back into bunkers, Gulf capitals and Washington face a stark question: if this is wave twentyâthree, how many more can come before one nightâs barrage turns from a contained shock into a regionâwide catastrophe?
