Defence Secretary Hegseth announced at the Pentagon's midday briefing that a second massive air assault on Iran is imminent. The assault will employ 500-pound and 2,000-pound bombs. Hegseth claimed US and Israeli forces will achieve "complete control of Iranian skies in under a week." The announcement — paired with his statement that Iran is "toast and they know it" — frames the second wave as the campaign's decisive phase.
The munitions Hegseth named are standard precision-guided ordnance: GBU-38 (500 lb) and GBU-31 (2,000 lb) Joint Direct Attack Munitions. The 2,000-lb variant with BLU-109 penetrating warhead was confirmed on B-2 Spirit sorties against underground ballistic missile facilities . Those warheads penetrate roughly 1–2 metres of reinforced concrete. Iran's Natanz enrichment halls sit beneath 8 metres of concrete and 22 metres of earth; Fordow is built inside a mountain . The GBU-57 Massive Ordnance Penetrator — the 30,000-lb bomb specifically engineered for such targets — has not been confirmed used. If destroying Iran's nuclear infrastructure is a primary campaign objective, the announced munitions cannot reach the hardest targets.
"Complete control of Iranian skies" conflates two distinct military tasks. Achieving air superiority over Iran's fighter fleet — ageing F-14 Tomcats, MiG-29s, and Su-24 Fencers, two of which Qatar's air force shot down during defensive operations this week — is achievable with US fifth-generation aircraft. Suppressing Iran's integrated air defence network, which includes Russian-supplied S-300PMU-2 systems and the indigenously produced Bavar-373, is a separate and harder problem. Hegseth's one-week timeline does not distinguish between the two.
A second assault presses against the conflict's narrowing diplomatic space. Iran's foreign minister told Oman's FM Albusaidi that Tehran was "open to serious efforts" toward de-escalation , and the Omani backchannel remains the only active diplomatic thread. The European Council on Foreign Relations assessed this week that no viable exit exists on current terms . Within the US administration itself, the campaign's purpose remains officially ambiguous — Hegseth stated "this is not a Regime change war" on the same day Secretary of State Rubio stated the US "would welcome ending the governing system in Tehran" . A second massive assault before any diplomatic process produces results answers Rubio's framing more than Hegseth's.
