US forces have struck more than 1,000 targets across Iran in 72 hours — naval vessels, submarine pens, missile batteries, communications infrastructure, and IRGC command centres. President Trump claimed nine Iranian warships have been sunk. Combined with Israel's 2,000-plus munitions dropped across 24 of 31 provinces (ID:88), the joint campaign is the most intensive aerial bombardment of a single country since the opening of Operation Iraqi Freedom in March 2003.
The target categories reveal intent. Submarine pens and warships aim to eliminate Iran's ability to threaten Gulf shipping — the IRGC had broadcast a closure of the Strait of Hormuz on VHF Channel 16 . Missile batteries and communications nodes degrade the capacity for further retaliation after Iran fired at 27 US military installations across seven countries (ID:472). IRGC command centres sever the organisational link between Tehran and its network of regional proxies. This is a campaign to dismantle Iran's conventional force projection, not a punitive raid.
Trump stated the campaign would last "four weeks or less" and told CNBC it was "ahead of schedule" . For destroying fixed infrastructure, the timeline is plausible — the US achieved comparable destruction against Iraq in 2003, Serbia in 1999, and Libya in 2011. Each of those campaigns succeeded in eliminating its target's conventional military hardware.
But each also failed to produce a stable political outcome through air power alone. NATO's 78-day bombing of Serbia required negotiation with Slobodan Milošević to end the war. Iraq's military collapse was followed by a decade-long insurgency. Iran, with its senior leadership largely dead , ID:470), presents the same structural problem: the United States can clearly destroy 1,000 targets. What it cannot manufacture from the air is a political authority on the Iranian side capable of agreeing to stop.
