CENTCOM commander says 8K targets hit in Iran: ‘Their navy is not sailing’
- Admiral Brad Cooper announced that US forces have struck over 8,000 Iranian military targets, including 130 vessels, resulting in the greatest naval destruction in three weeks since World War II.
- Thousands of Iranian missiles, advanced drones, and the entire Iranian fleet have been destroyed in offensive strikes, including the longest field artillery strike in history targeting Iranian infrastructure with precision-guided missiles.
- A recent strike on an underground facility along Iran's coast destroyed key missile launchers, anti-ship cruise missiles, intelligence sites, and radar stations, severely reducing Iran's threat to navigation in the Strait of Hormuz.
- The US and Gulf partners have established the most extensive air defense umbrella in the Middle East, defending against thousands of Iranian drone attacks and demonstrating strong partnership resilience.
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17 Articles
According to the US military, more than 8000 targets have been attacked in Iran during the three-week offensive.
CENTCOM commander says 8K targets hit in Iran: ‘Their navy is not sailing’
U.S. Central Command (CENTCOM) chief Adm. Brad Cooper said Saturday that the Pentagon’s operation in Iran has struck more than 8,000 targets since the start of the Middle East conflict. In his update, posted to social platform X, Cooper said the campaign has weakened Iran’s combat capabilities and crippled its naval forces. He added that…
‘Iran’s combat capability is on the steady decline’
US Central Command chief Adm. Brad Cooper said on Saturday in an operational update video that "Iran's combat capability is on the steady decline as our offensive strikes ramp up." According to Cooper, US forces have so far struck "more than 8,000 military targets, including 130 Iranian vessels," calling it "the greatest destruction of a navy in a three-week period since World War II." Update from CENTCOM Commander on Operation Epic Fury: pic.t…
The Iran war has been going on for three weeks. The U.S. military is now announcing new figures on the scale of the attacks.
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