
General Caine
US Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff leading military operations against Iran.
Last refreshed: 30 April 2026 · Appears in 1 active topic
Are Caine's damage assessments measuring destroyed capacity or dispersed missiles?
Timeline for General Caine
Testified alongside Hegseth at the HASC FY27 posture hearing
Iran Conflict 2026: Hegseth signs as Secretary of WarB-52s over Iran; 50,000 US troops in
Iran Conflict 2026Mentioned in: CENTCOM: 8,000 targets, 130 ships in 22d
Iran Conflict 2026Mentioned in: IAF hits 200 targets from Yazd to Shiraz
Iran Conflict 2026Disclosed alongside Hegseth that the US has struck 7,000+ targets
Iran Conflict 2026: 7,000 targets struck; no end in sight- Who is General Caine?
- General Dan Caine is the Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, the US military's senior uniformed officer. He was appointed by Trump and serves as the principal military advisor during the 2026 Iran conflict.Source: editorial
- What has General Caine said about Iran's missile capacity?
- Caine has stated Iran's missile launch rate fell approximately 90% from Day 1, attributing the decline to US strikes on launch infrastructure. Independent analysts have questioned whether this reflects destroyed capacity or a dispersed-but-unfired reserve.Source: editorial
- How many targets has the US struck in Iran?
- As of 22 days into the conflict, CENTCOM reported more than 8,000 targets struck and 8,000-plus combat sorties flown. Caine and Defence Secretary Hegseth had earlier disclosed the 7,000-target figure, confirming an escalating strike tempo.Source: CENTCOM
- What is the difference between General Caine and Admiral Brad Cooper?
- General Caine is Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff — the President's principal military advisor across all commands. Admiral Brad Cooper is the CENTCOM commander, who directly commands US forces in the Middle East theatre.Source: editorial
- Is Iran's missile capacity destroyed or just dispersed?
- This is the central intelligence dispute. Caine attributes the 90% reduction in Iranian missile launches to US strikes on infrastructure. Israeli analysts identified that Iran activated Decentralised Mosaic Defence, devolving launch authority to 31 provincial units, raising the possibility that capacity has dispersed rather than been destroyed.Source: Israeli military analysis
- Did the US use B-52 bombers in the Iran war?
- Yes. General Caine confirmed CENTCOM began flying B-52 Stratofortress bombers on overland missions inside Iran, representing a significant escalation and the first use of strategic bombers in the campaign.Source: CENTCOM
- What is Operation EPIC FURY?
- Operation EPIC FURY is the US name for the Iran air campaign launched 28 February 2026. It appeared in congressional documents for the first time on 29 April when Hegseth's HASC posture statement named it alongside a $25 billion war cost figure.Source: HASC
Background
General Dan Caine is the Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, the senior-most US military officer advising the President and Secretary of Defense. Appointed under the Trump administration, he is the military's highest uniformed authority during the 2026 Iran conflict, the largest US combat operation since Iraq.
Caine has been the public face of US military assessments throughout the campaign. At the first on-camera Pentagon briefing he confirmed the expectation of further US casualties . He later attributed Iran's reduced missile launch rate to US strikes on launch infrastructure . Alongside Pete Hegseth he disclosed the use of 5,000-pound penetrator weapons against underground coastal missile storage , and confirmed CENTCOM had begun flying B-52 Stratofortress bombers on overland missions inside Iran in a significant escalation of air power . By 29 April Hegseth's HASC posture statement named Operation EPIC FURY in congressional text for the first time, with a $25 billion war cost figure .
Caine's assessments shape Congressional and allied understanding of the war's trajectory. The gap between his degradation claims and independent analysis questioning whether Iran's reduced launch rate reflects destroyed capacity or a dispersed-but-unfired arsenal remains a consequential open question. He is distinct from CENTCOM Commander Admiral Brad Cooper, who commands the theatre; Caine advises across all commands and is the direct military link between the White House and the uniformed services.