Two more US service members were killed overnight, bringing confirmed American combat deaths to six in 72 hours. CBS News confirmed the figure. The dead are unnamed, their locations and circumstances undisclosed.
The count has risen steadily since the first three killed in Iran's initial retaliatory wave . A fourth died when Iranian munitions struck a fortified tactical operations centre . General Caine warned at the Pentagon's first on-camera briefing that additional losses should be expected . That warning has now been borne out twice in 24 hours. Air supremacy, declared by the IDF on Saturday evening after 2,000-plus munitions across 24 provinces , has not stopped Iranian forces from killing Americans. Iran's foreign minister stated that military units are operating outside central government direction — the dispersed, autonomous missile and drone units that US air power was designed to suppress remain lethal.
The deaths land alongside Secretary Rubio's admission to Congress that the threat to US forces was the predictable consequence of an Israeli operation the US chose to support. In the administration's own telling, these casualties were a cost it anticipated and accepted. Senator Warner, vice-chairman of the Senate Intelligence Committee, has stated publicly he saw no intelligence supporting the imminent-threat claim — the legal threshold for presidential war-making without congressional authorisation. The war powers vote expected this week cannot override a presidential veto, but six combat deaths make it a heavier political act than it was when no Americans had yet been killed.
President Trump described the campaign as lasting "four weeks or less" . Seventy-two hours later, he declined to rule out ground troops . The scope is expanding. So is the cost.
