CENTCOM confirmed on Friday that US forces struck Iran's space command — the infrastructure responsible for satellite-based targeting data and battlefield intelligence that guided Iranian Ballistic missile operations. The strikes eliminate the overhead surveillance capability that allowed Iranian launch crews to direct missiles at specific military installations across The Gulf.
Iran's Ballistic missile fire had already fallen 90% from Day 1 levels , a decline Admiral Brad Cooper attributed to strikes on launch infrastructure and buried missile storage. The space command strikes remove a different layer: not the missiles themselves, but the eyes that directed them. The IRGC activated its Decentralised Mosaic Defence doctrine earlier this week , devolving launch authority to 31 autonomous provincial units after decapitation strikes killed senior commanders on 28 February. Those units now operate without centralised command and without satellite targeting data — a double degradation that leaves each remaining launch less precise and less coordinated.
The military logic is straightforward: blind the adversary's residual strike capability. The second-order consequence is less comfortable. Iranian missiles aimed with satellite guidance struck identifiable military targets — the Fifth Fleet headquarters in Manama , Al Udeid Air Base in Qatar , the BAPCO refinery at Sitra . Missiles fired without that guidance, by autonomous provincial commanders operating under doctrine that authorises strikes without central approval, are more likely to miss intended targets. In the dense civilian geography of The Gulf — where Bahraini residential buildings, Dubai's Burj Al Arab , and Kuwaiti neighbourhoods where an eleven-year-old girl died from shrapnel have already absorbed impacts — reduced Iranian precision does not translate directly into reduced risk. It redistributes it.
