Iran launched a second wave of missiles and drones at Israel, US military installations, and Gulf state territory on Saturday. The first retaliatory wave, launched in the hours after the US-Israeli strikes, targeted 27 US military bases across seven countries (ID:472), with the Pentagon reporting zero American casualties at the time. The second wave maintained the same target categories — but produced casualties that the first did not.
The operational fact that matters: Iran can sustain multiple launch waves after absorbing simultaneous strikes across five cities. Operation Epic Fury (ID:469) was designed to degrade Iran's military capability. If Iran retains enough functioning missile infrastructure and launch crews to mount a second salvo, either the strikes did not achieve their degradation objectives or Iran's arsenal is more dispersed and hardened than the planners assumed. Iran's Ballistic missile programme has been built for survivability since at least the Stuxnet attack on Natanz in 2010, with production and storage facilities distributed across underground complexes designed to absorb aerial bombardment. The June 2025 strikes on Fordow, Natanz, and Isfahan (ID:76) would have accelerated that dispersal further.
The targeting of Gulf states — for the second time — deepens a diplomatic crisis that Gulf governments did not seek. Saudi Arabia had already publicly framed the conflict as one that began with US-Israeli attacks — a statement that distances Riyadh from Washington while leaving Saudi territory exposed to retaliation for hosting American forces. For Gulf capitals, the calculation they deferred for decades — whether US basing agreements create more security or more risk — is now being answered with Iranian warheads.
The second wave also contradicts the framing that Washington and Tel Aviv offered for the operation: a surgical, limited degradation of Iranian military and nuclear capability. Surgical operations end. Iran's continued ability to launch suggests this has become a war of attrition — and neither side has articulated what a stopping point looks like.
