Iran STRANDED! US Military Just Did Something DEVASTATING to $100B in Hormuz
In the early hours of the morning, as the clock struck 1:14 a.m., the Northern Persian Gulf became the stage for a dramatic military confrontation that would change the course of the ongoing conflict in the region.
The Strait of Hormuz, often regarded as one of the most dangerous maritime chokepoints in the world, was about to witness a devastating operation that would leave Iran reeling.
While the Iranian military had long prided itself on its missile capabilities and advanced air defense systems, this morning would reveal the vulnerability of their defenses in a way they could never have anticipated.
As the Iranian air defense network prepared for what they believed would be an imminent American strike, they were about to become unwitting participants in a carefully orchestrated trap.
The Iranian Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) had spent four decades building a formidable fortress along their coastline, designed to deter and destroy any threats from U.S. forces.

However, this morning, the smug confidence of the Iranian commanders would soon be replaced by panic and chaos.
The interaction began with a calculated probe from the U.S. side, as an operator at the Mirage 4 console in Bandar Abbas felt invincible, scanning the skies for incoming threats.
When the first signatures of what appeared to be a mᴀssive American strike package appeared on their radar, the bunker erupted into a frenzy of activity.
The commander ordered the launch of their SCAD 4B interceptors, believing they were about to deliver a decisive blow against the U.S. Navy.
Unbeknownst to them, this moment marked the beginning of their own undoing.
Every time the Iranian commander toggled his radar to guide a missile, he was effectively broadcasting his location, revealing the seams of their defense to the silent F-35C Lightning IIs hovering at 35,000 feet.

The U.S. forces were not yet firing back; instead, they were meticulously mapping the IRGC’s response in real-time, exploiting the Iranian military’s every move.
As the missile crews underground scrambled to prepare their anti-ship cruise missiles, believing they were about to unleash a torrent of firepower, their communications were already being disrupted by American electronic warfare aircraft.
The EA-18G Growlers flooded the command and control frequencies with a wall of electronic noise, severing the nerves of the Iranian defense network.
What had once been a unified fortress now resembled a disjointed collection of frightened islands, isolated from one another and unable to coordinate an effective response.
As the U.S. Cyber Command initiated a non-kinetic decapitation, Iran’s national connectivity was reduced to a mere 4% of its normal capacity.
With their radars spinning and missiles in their tubes, the Iranian commanders were left in the dark, unable to discern friend from foe.
This digital isolation rendered the Iranian military impotent, as they were forced to make decisions without the critical information needed to protect their ᴀssets.
As the clock ticked down, the U.S. forces launched a swarm of Tomahawk Block 5 cruise missiles from Arleigh Burke-class destroyers like the USS Bruins.
These subsonic weapons, traveling at roughly 550 mph, needed exactly 85 minutes to reach their targets along the Strait.
The slowest missile was launched first, dictating the timeline for the rest of the mission.
This provided a narrow window for the U.S. drones, stealth fighters, and electronic warfare aircraft to dismantle Iran’s air defense network before the Tomahawks arrived.
At 1:45 a.m., the first physical intruders entered Iranian airspace, but they were not the multi-billion dollar jets that the IRGC had anticipated.

Instead, they were ADM160M and Lucas drones, designed to mimic the radar signature of larger aircraft and create an economic trap for the Iranian defenders.
As these drones appeared on the radar screens, the Iranian commanders faced a dilemma: fire on what they believed to be high-value targets or risk letting potential bombers destroy their radar systems.
In a costly decision, the Iranian batteries launched their SCAD 4B and S300 interceptors, resulting in a catastrophic loss of resources.
Each launch acted as a beacon, revealing their exact coordinates to the U.S. fleet, while the F-35C Lightning IIs geolocated the battery positions with centimeter-level precision.
By 2:10 a.m., the Iranian magazine was depleted, and their defenses had been rendered blind.
Phase two of the operation commenced—the suppression of enemy air defenses.

The F-35C, with its minimal radar cross-section, was nearly invisible to the Iranian systems.
Operating alongside the stealth fighters were the EA-18G Growlers, deploying advanced jamming technology that rendered Iranian radar systems functionally blind.
With the Iranian defenses incapacitated, the U.S. forces introduced the AGM-88G AARGM-ER missile, a Mach 4 hunter-killer designed to target enemy radar systems with precision.
The result was devastating; within minutes, the eyes of the Bavar and S300 systems were vaporized, leaving the Forbidden Fortress blind and vulnerable.
As the tactical action officer aboard the USS Abraham Lincoln, the situation escalated with 12 incoming Iranian fast attack boats closing in at 40 knots.
With limited resources left, the decision to engage became critical.

At exactly 2:45 a.m., the Tomahawk Block 5 missiles reached the Iranian coastline, striking the entrance tunnels and ventilation shafts of the subterranean missile cities.
The impact was catastrophic, sealing the IRGC’s arsenal inside their own mountain fortress.
However, the most devastating blow came from the B-2 Spirit bombers, which released GBU-72 advanced 5,000-pound bunker busters.
These reinforced steel spears penetrated deep into the missile storage sites, igniting a catastrophic chain reaction that resulted in a geological event.
Reports indicated that blast doors weighing 10 tons were blown off their hinges as the internal pressure reached critical levels.
While the missile cities burned, F/A-18 Super Hornets and F-35Cs systematically dismantled remaining surface ᴀssets, targeting command bunkers and communication towers with surgical precision.

The cost of the munitions used by the U.S. Navy was a mere rounding error in the Pentagon’s budget, while Iran faced the loss of decades of strategic investment and billions in hardware.
The Iranian Revolutionary Guard continued to fight, but they were now isolated cells with weapons they could not effectively utilize.
In a desperate attempt to retaliate, they launched Fateh-110 ballistic missiles toward coalition bases, but without the necessary command and control, their missiles splashed harmlessly into the sea or hit empty desert miles away from their intended targets.
This operation demonstrated the ultimate victory of a well-executed sequence; it not only destroyed the enemy’s weapons but also their ability to use them.
In contrast to the lengthy air campaign against Iraq in 1991, which took 38 days to achieve similar results, the U.S. Navy dismantled Iran’s defenses in mere hours.
The key to this swift success was not merely superior firepower but the flawless execution of a strategic sequence.
By blinding the command phase, draining interceptors, breaking radar systems, and striking targets, the U.S. Navy created a mathematical inevitability.

If any step had been reversed or skipped, the operation would have failed.
However, with each phase executed in the correct order, the U.S. forces proved that in modern warfare, the side that fires in the right order wins.
As the sun rose over the Strait of Hormuz, the tactical reality in the region had fundamentally changed.
The Forbidden Fortress, once a symbol of Iranian military strength, now lay in ruins—a graveyard of 40 years of wasted engineering.
Every adversary watching the footage of these 90 minutes realized that their own defenses, no matter how formidable, could be dismantled just as easily.
The kill web had demonstrated that the era of traditional military might was over; the future belonged to those who could execute their strategies with precision and timing.
Iran had the weapons, the walls, and the decades of preparation, but they lacked the sequence that ultimately led to their downfall.