US Central Command (CENTCOM) struck more than 80 Iranian targets in a four-hour operation on 7 July, hitting air defences, command and control networks, coastal radar, anti-ship missiles and more than 60 Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) small boats. 1 CENTCOM said the strikes answered Iran's missile attacks on three commercial vessels in the Strait of Hormuz, including the liquefied natural gas carrier Al Rekayyat this desk led on the day before .
Iran replied inside the same cycle, and its own two accounts of that reply differ tenfold. English-language wires reported the IRGC claimed hits on 85 US military sites in Bahrain and Kuwait, including a drone strike on Sheikh Isa airbase, and said it downed a US MQ-9 Reaper drone over southern Iran. 2 The IRGC's Farsi statement, carried by Tabnak, described a joint missile and drone operation against eight important infrastructures, not 85. 3 Neither figure has been independently verified, and the gap is either a transliteration error running through the wires or deliberate audience-splitting for foreign and domestic readers.
This is the second US-Iran exchange over The Gulf states in ten days. The 28 June IRGC strike on Ali Al Salem in Kuwait and the US Fifth Fleet headquarters in Bahrain drew a bounded CENTCOM reply of ten targets and then a verbal halt. That cycle closed with words. This one has a signed licence revocation stapled to it, so the loss of 60-plus boats and coastal radar degrades Iran's ability to police Hormuz by force just as its legal oil channel closes.
