Skip to content
Briefings are running a touch slower this week while we rebuild the foundations.See roadmap
European Tech Sovereignty
13APR

Satellite images reveal Fifth Fleet hit

3 min read
17:09UTC

Commercial satellite imagery shows the Fifth Fleet's Bahrain headquarters lost its encrypted communications backbone during the war's most demanding week.

TechnologyDeveloping
Key takeaway

Targeting Fifth Fleet's communications infrastructure rather than its ships or personnel represents a sophisticated effects-based strike designed to degrade operational coordination without generating US casualties that would amplify domestic escalation pressure.

New York Times analysis of Planet Labs and Airbus Defence & Space satellite imagery confirmed that Naval Support Activity Manama — the Fifth Fleet's headquarters in Bahrain, struck by Iranian missiles on 4 March — suffered damage the Pentagon had not disclosed. Several buildings were completely destroyed. Two AN/GSC-52B secure wideband satellite communications terminals, each worth approximately $20 million, and an AN/TPS-59 radar unit were confirmed destroyed.

The AN/GSC-52B terminals carry the encrypted satellite links through which the Fifth Fleet coordinates naval operations across the Arabian Gulf, Red Sea, and western Indian Ocean. Their destruction forced a shift to backup communications during the same days that a US submarine torpedoed the IRIS Dena in the Indian Ocean and Iranian missile salvos continued in waves across the region. The fleet's primary secure voice went down at peak operational demand.

No US personnel casualties at Manama have been reported. But Iran demonstrated it can reach and degrade the command infrastructure — communications and radar — that makes the Fifth Fleet a coordination hub rather than merely a geographic presence.

The Pentagon released no damage assessment after the Manama strike. At Al Udeid, it was Qatar's defence ministry — not CENTCOM — that confirmed the destruction of a $1.1 billion AN/FPS-132 radar . In both cases, the public record was filled by host governments and commercial satellite operators. Washington's silence on its own infrastructure losses has been consistent throughout the conflict's first week.

Deep Analysis

In plain English

The Fifth Fleet does not just fight — it coordinates. The AN/GSC-52B terminals destroyed at Manama are the encrypted satellite links that allow the Fleet commander to talk securely to ships across the Arabian Gulf, Red Sea, and Indian Ocean simultaneously and share real-time sensor data. Without them, the fleet shifts to backup systems — roughly equivalent to the difference between high-speed fibre and a dial-up modem. The fleet keeps functioning, but more slowly and with less ability to synchronise operations across three bodies of water during the period when that synchronisation matters most.

Deep Analysis
Synthesis

Commercial satellite imagery from Planet Labs and Airbus has publicly confirmed damage that the US military has not officially acknowledged. This creates a dangerous asymmetry: adversaries who can read the same imagery now know the Fifth Fleet is operating on degraded backup communications and can calibrate their operations accordingly, while the US government has not yet been forced into disclosure. The OSINT verification loop has effectively forced operational information into the public domain without the Pentagon choosing to release it — a new dynamic in military information management that will recur in future conflicts.

Root Causes

The precision targeting of AN/GSC-52B terminals — rather than command buildings or personnel — reflects a deliberate calculation to avoid US casualties, which would trigger intense domestic US pressure for escalation. Destroying capability without killing Americans keeps the conflict within a threshold Iran may have assessed as sustainable; the same targeting logic explains why no US casualties have been reported at Manama despite extensive building damage.

What could happen next?
  • Consequence

    Fifth Fleet is coordinating three-ocean operations on backup communications with significantly reduced bandwidth, degrading ISR sharing and targeting synchronisation during the conflict's most intensive phase.

    Immediate · Assessed
  • Meaning

    Targeting C2 infrastructure rather than personnel indicates a deliberate Iranian strategy to degrade US operational effectiveness while staying below the casualty threshold that would sharply intensify US domestic escalation pressure.

    Immediate · Suggested
  • Precedent

    Commercial OSINT satellite imagery has confirmed US military HQ damage before the Pentagon disclosed it, establishing that adversaries and the public now share real-time battle-damage awareness independent of official US information management.

    Long term · Assessed
  • Risk

    The known backup communications period may be exploited by adversaries to probe US response times and sensor coverage while primary SATCOM coordination is degraded and the fleet's synchronisation is reduced.

    Short term · Suggested
First Reported In

Update #21 · $1.1bn radar destroyed; warships named

Stars and Stripes· 5 Mar 2026
Read original
Causes and effects
This Event
Satellite images reveal Fifth Fleet hit
Iran destroyed the Fifth Fleet's primary encrypted satellite communications terminals at Naval Support Activity Manama, forcing a shift to backup systems during peak operational tempo. The Pentagon did not disclose the damage; commercial satellites and the New York Times did.
Different Perspectives
ASML / European tech industry
ASML / European tech industry
ASML's Q2 2026 guidance came in €300m below consensus as China DUV revenue collapsed 17 percentage points; the company's CEO wrote US export-control outcomes directly into 2026 guidance. European tech firms named on the USTR retaliation list alongside SAP, Siemens and Spotify face the same calculus: US trade exposure constrains what Brussels can legislate on their behalf.
France / Anne Le Henanff
France / Anne Le Henanff
Le Henanff chaired the G7 Digital Ministerial at Bercy on 29 May with CAIDA off the agenda, pivoting France's presidency to AI safety principles it had not designed the week around. France backs CAIDA but cannot override Berlin's tariff calculus, so the ministerial produced no new French-led commitment.
Germany / Federal government
Germany / Federal government
Berlin's automotive sector faces up to $200bn in threatened US tariffs, a commercial exposure that dwarfs any benefit CAIDA's public-sector cloud rules would deliver to German digital firms. Federal silence inside the College of Commissioners functions as a block under consensus adoption rules without requiring a formal veto.
USTR / Ambassador Andrew Puzder
USTR / Ambassador Andrew Puzder
Puzder's public warning on 25 May that CAIDA is inconsistent with the EU-US trade framework was the first time Washington made its bilateral pressure visible before a Commission adoption vote rather than after. The USTR Section 301 determination on 24 July provides the enforcement backstop.
European Commission / Henna Virkkunen
European Commission / Henna Virkkunen
Virkkunen framed the third slip as a procedural delay in finalising a 400-page text without addressing Puzder's trade-framework red line publicly. The Commission enforces existing law against Google while losing the legislative timeline on CAIDA, exposing an asymmetric position: enforcement holds; new sovereignty legislation does not.
OpenForum Europe / open-source community
OpenForum Europe / open-source community
The EUR 350m Sovereign Tech Fund has no Commission host, no budget line, and no commissioner's name attached six weeks after the April conference, while Germany is already paying maintainers to staff international standards bodies. The CRA open-source guidance resolves contributor liability but leaves the financial-donations grey area open with the 11 September reporting clock running.