>>176892,
>>176893,
>>176894,
>>176895,
>>176896,
>>176897,
>>176898,
>>176899,
>>176900,
>>176901,
>>176902,
>>176903,
>>176904,
>>176905,
>>176906,
>>176907,
>>176908,
>>176909,
>>176910,
>>176911,
>>176912,
>>176913,
>>176914,
>>176915,
>>176916,
>>176917,
>>176918,
>>176919,
>>176920,
>>176921,
>>176922,
>>176923,
>>176924,
>>176925,
>>176926Mark R. Levin @marklevinshow - This is the greatest peace mission of our lifetimes
Quote
Shanaka Anslem Perera @shanaka86
IRAN IS NOW MILITARILY NAKED
The IDF dropped over 2,000 bombs in 30 hours and achieved air superiority over Iranian airspace on Day One. Read that again. Air superiority over a nation of 88 million people with the largest ballistic missile arsenal in the Middle East, accomplished before the second sunrise.
Here is what that means in physics, not politics.
The HQ-9B air defense ring protecting Tehran was inactivated. The S-300PMU-2 batteries that Russia delivered in 2016, the crown jewel of Iranian integrated air defense, were struck in the opening waves alongside their associated radar systems. The IDF conducted 700 sorties. CENTCOM hit over 1,000 targets. The New York Times confirmed that half of Iran’s ballistic missile launchers have now been destroyed across the June 2025 and February 2026 campaigns combined.
Half.
Iran entered 2025 with an estimated 3,000 ballistic missiles and roughly 400 mobile launchers distributed across hardened sites, tunnel networks, and dispersal positions refined over three decades. The IRGC Aerospace Force built the most sophisticated road-mobile missile architecture outside of China and Russia. Ghadr-1 variants with 1,950-kilometer range. Emad precision-guided reentry vehicles. Kheibar Shekan solid-fuel missiles designed specifically to evade Israeli early warning.
That architecture is being dismantled in real time.
The IDF released footage of F-35I Adirs destroying TEL vehicles (transporter-erector-launchers) on open roads. CENTCOM published video of Tomahawks striking hardened missile storage facilities. B-2 stealth bombers hit sites that survived the June campaign using 2,000-pound penetrating munitions. Israel-Alma’s battlefield assessment logged 62 separate waves of Iranian launches, each wave smaller than the last, confirming the progressive degradation of launch capacity in real time.
This is the Scud hunt problem from 1991, solved.
Coalition forces spent the entire Gulf War failing to suppress Iraqi mobile Scud launchers in the western desert. The kill rate was near zero despite thousands of sorties. The difference now: persistent ISR from space-based sensors, AI-assisted targeting, and F-35 sensor fusion creating kill chains that compress the detect-to-destroy timeline from hours to minutes. The mobile launcher that once survived by relocating between launches now gets struck during erection sequence.
And here is the implication no one is stating plainly.
Iran’s air defense network is the only thing standing between whatever enriched uranium remains and a future strike that removes it permanently. The 408 kilograms of 60% enriched material that the IAEA flagged before June 2025 was never fully accounted for. Defense Minister Katz admitted Israel does not know where all of it went. If that material exists in any recoverable form, the air defense architecture that would have protected it during a breakout attempt is now burning across 24 provinces.
Iran is not just losing a war. Iran is losing the physical capacity to protect the one asset that guaranteed regime survival: the latent nuclear option.
Message too long. Click here to view full text.