Iran's decision to retaliate directly — rather than routing its response entirely through proxy forces — marks a change from the posture Tehran maintained through 2024 and early 2025, when Hezbollah, the Houthis, and Iraqi militias were used to maintain plausible deniability. Direct ballistic missile strikes on US military bases across seven countries remove that deniability entirely and signal that Iran has concluded the era of calibrated, deniable escalation is over.
The seven-country targeting demonstrates a pre-positioned strike capability that had been mapped and planned well in advance of 28 February. Iran's ballistic missile arsenal — including Fattah, Kheibar Shekan, and Emad variants — has sufficient range to reach US bases across the Gulf and the Levant. The simultaneous nature of the strikes suggests launch windows were coordinated to prevent interception assets in one country from being redirected to defend another.
Direct Iranian retaliation also forecloses certain de-escalation paths that proxies left open. When Iran uses proxies, it retains the option of claiming non-involvement and negotiating a pause. A direct ballistic missile attack on US military installations in seven countries creates a legal and political obligation on the United States to respond, regardless of damage levels. The strike's geographic breadth makes any US non-response politically untenable.
