Defence Secretary Pete Hegseth told reporters at the Pentagon that today's air operations would constitute "the largest volume of strikes since Day 1", and in the same briefing characterised Iran's outbound missile fire over the prior daily as the lowest of the war 1.
Both statements may be true. Neither tells the reader where the strikes are landing. Hegseth declined to specify target categories, and the civilian-infrastructure thresholds rhetorically crossed at every prior deadline were conspicuously not announced. Tonight's largest-volume claim therefore describes more sorties against the same target list, not a shift up the escalation ladder.
Iran's lowest-of-war missile rate is the more analytically ambiguous half. It could reflect deliberate conservation, SEAD-driven degradation of Iran's launchers, or pre-deadline withholding for a single high-volume strike. The interceptor depletion picture makes either reading consequential. Hegseth's framing leans towards the second reading, but the briefing offered no underlying data to support it. The direction resolves only over the coming days.
