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ALM’s Background Summary: Epic Fury: Iranian Response
1. Port Shuaiba, Kuwait (The Costliest Strike), March 1, 2026
- The Incident: On March 1, 2026, an Iranian one-way attack drone struck the operations center of the U.S. Army’s 103rd Expeditionary Sustainment Command.
- The Toll: Six U.S. Army Reserve soldiers were killed and dozens more were wounded.
- The Vulnerability: The port was used to disperse forces off massive bases like Camp Arifjan to complicate Iranian targeting. However, reports later revealed a systemic failure of the base’s “Big Voice” warning system and a lack of overhead hardening/cover.
2. Camp Buehring, Kuwait, March 1, 2026
- The Incident: In a highly unusual breach of regional air defenses, an Iranian F-5 fighter jet managed to penetrate Kuwaiti airspace and strike Camp Buehring.
- The Damage: This rare fixed-wing penetration caused damage to ground infrastructure.
3. Al-Udeid Air Base, Qatar, July 2026
- The Incident: Targeted heavily during the opening phases of the retaliatory waves.
- The Damage: While defense networks intercepted a majority of the salvos, at least one runway was completely destroyed, temporarily disrupting regional air mobility and refueling operations. Iran’s IRGC also claimed to have targeted a jet maintenance center and command facility here.
Recent Escalations at Al-Udeid (July 2026)
Because Al-Udeid hosts the Combined Air Operations Center (CAOC)—the nerve center directing all U.S. air campaigns across the Middle East—it has remained a primary target for Iran’s strategy to degrade U.S. command-and-control capabilities.
- July 9, 2026: In an earlier phase of the Nasr-2 campaign, an IRGC strike successfully destroyed a $15 million AN/GSC-52B(V5) Military Environmental satellite dish (a massive 12.2-meter installation by L3Harris). This marked a significant material loss for the U.S. outside the continental United States.
- July 16-17, 2026 (Overnight): The IRGC launched a substantial ballistic missile attack targeting Al-Udeid.
- The Iranian Claim: The IRGC Aerospace Force publicly claimed the attack successfully destroyed a “jet maintenance center,” a “command-and-control center,” a long-range radar system, and several U.S. strategic aerial refueling aircraft.
- The Actual Impact: Qatari and U.S. Patriot missile batteries intercepted the incoming barrage over Doha. Neither Qatar nor the U.S. has confirmed the infrastructure damage claimed by Iran. However, shrapnel from the mid-air interceptions fell into a residential area in Doha, wounding four civilians, including a child.
Strategic Context for the July 17 Strike This strike is particularly significant diplomatically, as it occurred just two days before scheduled U.S.-Iran negotiations were set to begin in Muscat, Oman. By striking the base in Qatar, Iran has placed immense pressure on Doha’s ability to maintain its role as a neutral mediator, demonstrating a pattern of applying military leverage immediately before diplomatic engagements.
4. Strikes on Naval Support Activity Bahrain
Because the U.S. Fifth Fleet’s area of operations encompasses critical choke points like the Strait of Hormuz and the Suez Canal, its headquarters at Naval Support Activity Bahrain in Manama became an immediate, high-priority target for Iranian retaliation during Operation Epic Fury.
- February 28, 2026: In direct retaliation for the launch of the joint U.S.-Israeli campaign (Operation Epic Fury), Iran launched coordinated missile and drone strikes hitting multiple buildings in the capital of Manama, including the Juffair district. The government of Bahrain confirmed that the Fifth Fleet service center was subjected to a missile attack. Video footage from the area showed smoke rising from the vicinity of the base, marking one of the most direct military confrontations between Iran and U.S. naval infrastructure in the Gulf. For further details on the initial strike, see Military.com’s Coverage.
- April 1, 2026: Expanding its asymmetric harassment tactics beyond direct military installations, Iran struck Bahrain’s largest telecom operator. This action demonstrated a strategic intent to degrade the civilian and commercial infrastructure hosting U.S. forces.
- June 6 & 11, 2026: Iran resumed targeting the U.S. Navy site in Bahrain with ballistic missiles. CENTCOM reported that of seven missiles launched in early June, six were intercepted. Subsequent strikes on June 11 targeted communication antennas and radar facilities of the Patriot system located at the base. Wreckage from downed drones fell into populated areas of Manama, igniting vehicles and damaging civilian housing. (2026 Iranian strikes on Bahrain – Wikipedia)
Iran’s campaign of raw pain-infliction has continued through the summer, characterized by attempts to blind U.S. defensive grids and destroy fuel logistics.
- July 14, 2026: The Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) claimed a major, coordinated drone and missile strike targeting the Fifth Fleet. The IRGC publicly asserted that the attack successfully set fuel depots ablaze and destroyed several critical radar systems, including a Patriot radar, the fleet’s primary air control radar, and a C-RAM early warning system. They also claimed the destruction of a control and monitoring center for unmanned surface vessels. As with the recent strikes on Al-Udeid, the IRGC stated that its “retaliatory operation continues.” The full Iranian operational claim is tracked via Middle East Eye.
The Nasr-2 Escalation (July 2026)
Iran’s campaign of raw pain-infliction has continued through the summer, characterized by attempts to blind U.S. defensive grids and destroy fuel logistics.
- July 14, 2026: The Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) claimed a major, coordinated drone and missile strike targeting the Fifth Fleet. The IRGC publicly asserted that the attack successfully set fuel depots ablaze and destroyed several critical radar systems, including a Patriot radar, the fleet’s primary air control radar, and a C-RAM early warning system. They also claimed the destruction of a control and monitoring center for unmanned surface vessels. As with the recent strikes on Al-Udeid, the IRGC stated that its “retaliatory operation continues.” The full Iranian operational claim is tracked via Middle East Eye.
5. Other Key Installations Hit
- Jordan: Drone hangars, command and control centers, and radar sites were hit during the initial March waves.
- Oman: Support and refueling platforms used by U.S. aircraft carriers came under direct attack in Oman’s coastal ports.
- Syria & Iraq: U.S. patrol bases and coalition installations in eastern Syria and western Iraq faced sustained drone and short-range ballistic missile salvos from Iranian-aligned Popular Mobilization Forces (PMF).
The Tactical Takeaway:
While U.S. and allied operations successfully degraded more than 66% of Iran’s drone, missile, and naval manufacturing facilities, the retaliation proved that forward-deployed U.S. forces no longer enjoy sanctuary in the region. The total repair bill for U.S. regional infrastructure is currently estimated to exceed $5 billion, with the loss or severe damage of several high-value MQ-9 Reaper drones, refueling tankers, and high-end radar installations.
ALM’s Background Summary: Epic Fury
Operation Epic Fury, which ran from February 28, 2026, to May 5, 2026, represented one of the most concentrated air and sea campaigns in modern military history. Coordinated between U.S. and partner forces, the campaign was specifically engineered to dismantle the Iranian regime’s security apparatus, offensive strike platforms, and naval force-projection capabilities.
Official data released in the U.S. Department of War’s Operation Epic Fury Fact Sheet outlines a massive systemic degradation of Iranian defense capabilities. By early April alone, coalition forces had struck over 13,000 distinct targets.
The primary Iranian defense assets, manufacturing sites, and command structures destroyed or permanently degraded during the operation are summarized below:
1. Command, Control, and Leadership Decapitation
The opening salvo on February 28, 2026, launched under the U.S. codename Epic Fury (and Israel’s Operation Roaring Lion), prioritized the immediate decapitation of Iran’s central military and political decision-making nodes.
- Central Command Facilities: Multiple Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) headquarters buildings, intelligence hubs, and the Iranian Defense Council’s secure meeting facilities were systematically leveled during the initial 72 hours.
- High-Value Leadership: A series of precision compound strikes killed the regime’s core military planners, including Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei, Secretary of the Defense Council Ali Shamkhani, and senior operational chiefs overseeing logistics, intelligence, and planning.
- Brigade HQs: Regional command centers, such as the Ashura Brigade Headquarters in Tabriz, were targeted and destroyed to prevent coordinated regional militia control.
2. Naval Force Projection (The Gulf & Strait of Hormuz)
To secure the critical global shipping lanes of the Persian Gulf and the Gulf of Oman, coalition air and sea assets engaged in extensive counter-naval operations.
- Vessels Neutralized: At least 155+ Iranian Navy ships and submarines were damaged or completely destroyed. This severely crippled Iran’s conventional fleet and destroyed the bulk of its fast-attack swarming craft operated by the IRGC Navy.
- Strategic Port and Island Infrastructure: Major maritime facilities supporting asymmetric warfare were targeted, including naval depots at Bushehr and strategic outposts like Kharg Island.
3. Integrated Air Defense Systems (IADS)
Before U.S. heavy bombers (including B-2 Spirit and B-1 units) could safely operate over highly defended Iranian airspace, the coalition carried out a methodical rollback of the regime’s air shields.
- Radar and SAM Sites: Coordinated electronic warfare and physical strikes dismantled Iran’s Russian-supplied S-300 and S-400 surface-to-air missile (SAM) batteries, early warning radar installations, and localized point defenses around critical infrastructure.
- Airspace Superiority: The swift degradation of Iran’s integrated air defenses allowed U.S. and allied strike fighters to establish total air superiority directly over major cities, including Tehran, within the first three days of the war.
4. Ballistic Missile and Drone Infrastructure
With Iran boasting one of the largest missile arsenals in the Middle East, a primary focus of Operation Epic Fury was preventing the regime from replenishing or deploying its offensive stockpiles.
- Manufacturing and Assembly: Ballistic missile and one-way attack drone manufacturing plants, assembly facilities, and research complexes were targeted and taken offline.
- Launch Facilities: Hardened underground missile silos, mobile launcher convoy corridors, and anti-ship missile batteries along the coast were thoroughly mapped and struck.
- Depots and Storage Bunkers: Deep-buried weapons storage bunkers and ammunition depots—such as the massive ordnance hub at Bushehr—were systematically collapsed using advanced bunker-buster munitions.
Operational Impact:
Though Iran retained localized asymmetric capabilities—allowing proxy groups to launch harassing fire against U.S. regional bases—the campaign effectively broke the back of the regime’s conventional defense networks. It stripped Iran of its integrated air defense umbrella, erased more than half of its active naval tonnage, and destroyed its primary industrial capacity to manufacture advanced guided missiles and long-range UAVs.
For a deep dive into how these strikes played out over the timeline of the conflict, you can review the U.S. Department of War’s official timeline and brief briefings or track the post-conflict maritime friction via the Britannica Operation Epic Fury Overview.
This BackChannels editor, J. S. Oppenheim, has been working with A Language Machine to produce either ready-to-publish blog material or reports (MS Word or PDF formats). It’s an uneven Human-Computer Interaction (HCI) process: we “hoomanimals”, especially old ones, get tired in unpredictable ways; and unlike a junior editor and senior team, the AI and human may not return to exactly the last best draft for iterative improvements. In classic editorial process, conceptualization, drafting, reflection, re-drafting, editing fresh, resting the text, editing again, moving on to copy editing and then to proofing for delivery to a printer took a little bit of time. 🙂 With AI, two seconds is all it takes if the prompt and its interpretation and output path have been well defined, interpreted, and expressed as specified.
My wish as a minor editor and influencer has been to move focus toward Moscow and the end of the end of the Cold War in relation to civilizational Russian barbarism and its integration of the practices of feudal-medieval mafia into a present statecraft that serves Putin and his patronage system–and the Russian people not at all. Putin’s regime, in fact, has been devouring Russia’s children with its efforts to conquer Ukraine and brings its nefarious operations into Europe.
I may or may not achieve my own wish–other variables surround me–but Moscow has remained a center for the support of dictatorships and down-the-line extremism and terrorism since the collapse of the Soviet Union (related: https://conflict-backchannels.com/2022/07/19/detecting-post-soviet-russias-black-narrative-of-revenge-for-89-and-91/). One may in part blame that center of power for Donald Trump (e.g., https://www.reuters.com/investigates/special-report/usa-trump-property/ – on X: #RussiaRussiaRussia) who appears to believe he has “taken over” America.
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