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Iran Conflict 2026
11JUN

Iran's missiles down 90% from Day 1

3 min read
09:17UTC

CENTCOM says strikes on launch infrastructure cut Iran's missile fire by nine-tenths. Israeli analysts point to Iran's mosaic defence doctrine and 31 autonomous provincial units — the question is whether they can't fire or haven't yet.

ConflictDeveloping
Key takeaway

The 90% reduction in Iranian missile launches may be measuring the destruction of centralised launch infrastructure rather than actual missile inventory depletion — the two are indistinguishable from outside until dispersed units choose to fire.

Admiral Brad Cooper confirmed that Iran's Ballistic missile attacks are down 90% from Day 1 levels and drone launches have fallen 83%. Cooper attributed the decline to sustained US strikes on launch infrastructure, including B-2 bomber missions that dropped dozens of 2,000-lb penetrator munitions on deeply buried Ballistic missile launchers. B-1 bombers were also employed. The figures track the trajectory reported earlier in the week: Joint Chiefs Chairman General Dan Caine noted Iran was firing fewer missiles than at the war's start , and IRGC waves 16 and 17 comprised "more than 40 missiles" — sharply below early-conflict salvos that ran to hundreds per wave . A former US official told Middle East Eye that Washington has "shot several years' worth of production in the last few days."

The 90% figure carries a caveat that Cooper's briefing did not address. Israeli analysts and The Jerusalem Post reported that Iran has fully activated its Decentralised Mosaic Defence doctrine , devolving launch authority to 31 autonomous provincial units — one per province — with authorisation to conduct strikes without central command approval. The doctrine was designed for precisely this scenario: when centralised command infrastructure is destroyed, provincial units operate independently. The question Cooper's figures do not answer is whether the 90% reduction reflects capacity that has been physically destroyed or capacity that has been dispersed to 31 independent nodes and has not yet fired.

The distinction determines what kind of war this becomes. Iran's missile programme began during the 1980-88 Iran-Iraq War, when Iraqi Scud attacks on Iranian cities killed thousands and Tehran had no means of retaliating. The programme was built over three decades as a strategic deterrent — Iran's answer to the permanent asymmetry in air power, since its air force still flies airframes dating to the Shah's era. If the strikes have genuinely destroyed this infrastructure, then the deterrent Iran spent 30 years constructing has been eliminated in seven days, and Tehran's military posture — for this conflict and any future confrontation — reverts to asymmetric and proxy warfare, the IRGC's founding mandate from the early 1980s before Iran began pursuing conventional capabilities.

If the dispersed provincial units retain significant stockpiles, the arithmetic looks different. Thirty-one autonomous launch nodes are harder to track and suppress than centralised batteries, even if each node commands fewer missiles. The current lull could be a function of degraded coordination rather than degraded capacity — dispersed units recalibrating after the loss of central command, not units with nothing left to fire. The next 48 to 72 hours of launch data will begin to distinguish between these two interpretations.

Deep Analysis

In plain English

Imagine Iran's missile programme as a company where all orders previously came from one head office. US strikes destroyed that head office and its communication lines, so launches stopped. But Iran had already promoted 31 regional managers with independent authority to act. The '90% reduction' may simply mean the regional managers haven't received — or haven't yet generated — their own orders to fire, rather than meaning 90% of the missiles are destroyed. The silence is not the same as disarmament.

Deep Analysis
Synthesis

The coexistence of a 90% launch reduction with an intact dispersed launch capability creates a strategic measurement paradox: the primary metric used to assess campaign success — launch rate — is structurally decoupled from the metric that actually matters — surviving and ready launch capacity. US strike planners treating the 90% figure as a measure of effectiveness may be optimising against the wrong indicator, a pattern with precedent in Coalition SCUD-hunting during Gulf War 1991, where high claimed kill rates masked low actual launcher destruction.

Root Causes

The 31-province launch authority structure mirrors Iran's administrative geography, indicating the doctrine was embedded in peacetime military-civil integration over years rather than improvised under fire. Its activation reflects a strategic investment in regime survival through redundancy — the same logic that drove Iran to bury its missile infrastructure in the first place, applied to command architecture rather than physical hardening.

Escalation

The activation of Mosaic Defence creates a latent escalation risk structurally different from the current trend line: the apparent de-escalation in Iranian launches could reverse rapidly and without warning if the 31 provincial units receive or autonomously generate a trigger event. This is categorically different from a gradual escalation and is harder to manage diplomatically because there is no single decision-maker to negotiate with or signal to.

What could happen next?
  • Risk

    The 90% launch-rate reduction may generate false strategic confidence in campaign success while Iran's dispersed capacity remains intact and capable of a coordinated surge without warning.

    Short term · Assessed
  • Meaning

    Campaign effectiveness metrics based on launch rates are structurally misleading when the adversary has pre-delegated authority to autonomous provincial units that have not yet chosen to fire — a measurement problem that will not self-correct until the units act.

    Immediate · Assessed
  • Risk

    Diplomatic negotiations conducted under the assumption that Iran's missile capacity is 90% degraded could collapse catastrophically if dispersed units activate during a peace process, producing rapid military escalation precisely when political de-escalation is most fragile.

    Medium term · Suggested
  • Precedent

    Iran's Mosaic Defence implementation provides the first real-world test of whether decentralised launch authority survives high-intensity air campaign conditions, with significant implications for future deterrence architecture in North Korea, Russia, and other states watching this conflict.

    Long term · Suggested
First Reported In

Update #23 · Iran loses half its navy; China eyes Hormuz

Navy Times· 6 Mar 2026
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Causes and effects
This Event
Iran's missiles down 90% from Day 1
Whether the 90% reduction in missile fire reflects destroyed infrastructure or dispersed-but-unfired capacity under Iran's mosaic defence doctrine determines whether Iran's conventional deterrent has been eliminated or merely redistributed across 31 provincial units.
Different Perspectives
Oil markets and Lloyd's of London
Oil markets and Lloyd's of London
Brent fell to $89.25 on ceasefire probability, not new barrels, with traders voting for Trump's deed over Tehran's denial. Lloyd's has not repriced Hormuz war-risk cover because its trigger requires a UN Security Council resolution or government certification, so tanker insurance costs remain elevated regardless of the spot move.
Pakistan and Qatar mediators
Pakistan and Qatar mediators
Pakistan's Mohsin Naqvi was in Tehran for his second visit in under a week, using the Pakistan-Qatar channel that delivered April's ceasefire after an identical public-denial cycle. The channel carries both civilian and military buy-in from Islamabad, the only configuration Iran's split command cannot dismiss as a partial signal.
India
India
India summoned the US Deputy Chief of Mission after three Indian sailors were killed aboard MT Settebello, the first formal grievance from a major non-belligerent directed at US enforcement. Indian seafarers supply roughly 12 per cent of the global maritime workforce; their presence on third-flag Gulf tankers is structurally inevitable regardless of bilateral diplomacy.
Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC)
Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC)
The IRGC declared Hormuz closed on 11 June while civilian negotiators were on the same mediation channel, then issued no public comment on the MoU framework. Its silence on the framework, rather than any foreign ministry statement, is the operative approval signal; the corps' unilateral Hormuz closure shows it did not treat the diplomatic track as binding on its operations.
Iran foreign ministry (Baghaei)
Iran foreign ministry (Baghaei)
Esmail Baghaei told IRNA that reports of a finalised deal were 'merely speculation' and that Iran had 'not yet made a final decision'. The denial is structurally identical to Iranian foreign ministry statements during the April ceasefire talks, which produced a binding text within 48 hours of the same language.
Trump administration / CENTCOM
Trump administration / CENTCOM
Trump cancelled the third strike day and called the MoU 'very strong' and almost ready to sign, while CENTCOM kept tanker enforcement running in the same 24-hour window. The administration is simultaneously withdrawing the military pressure it claims drove the deal and sustaining the enforcement campaign it is trying to trade away.