Skip to content
Iran Conflict 2026
20APR

Half of Iran's missiles survive, WSJ reports

2 min read
10:10UTC

The Wall Street Journal, citing US intelligence officials, reported on 10 April that Iran has preserved roughly half its ballistic missile and attack-drone stockpile. Defence Secretary Pete Hegseth called the programme 'functionally destroyed' a fortnight earlier.

ConflictDeveloping
Key takeaway

Washington's spies believe Iran can still hurt things; Washington's ministers do not say so.

The Wall Street Journal, citing US intelligence officials, reported on 10 April that Tehran has preserved roughly half its ballistic missile and attack-drone stockpile and retains "thousands of ballistic missiles" 1. Defence Secretary Pete Hegseth had told reporters in late March that Iran's missile and drone programmes were "functionally destroyed", and Benjamin Netanyahu said last month that Iran had "no ability" to rebuild.

More than half of Iran's missile launchers have been destroyed, damaged, or buried by US and Israeli strikes, the same officials say, but Tehran can still repair them or dig the buried ones out. US intelligence believes Iran can reconstitute significant strike capability on a timeline measured in months, not years. This is single-provenance US-intelligence reporting relayed through one American paper.

The assessment arrives in the same week Washington has issued zero formal Iran presidential instruments across the full war and during the diplomatic window opened at Islamabad . Every declaration of completion in this war has been followed within days by an intelligence assessment that quietly contradicts it: Trump's "nuclear objective attained", Hegseth's "functionally destroyed", Netanyahu's "no ability". The public claim shrinks; the private estimate catches up.

Deep Analysis

In plain English

Defence Secretary Hegseth said Iran's missiles were 'functionally destroyed'. Israel's Netanyahu said Iran had 'no ability to rebuild'. The US intelligence community — the same officials whose analysis underlies both those claims — now says Iran has kept roughly half its missiles. This does not mean the strikes failed entirely: more than half of Iran's launch platforms (the vehicles and fixed sites from which missiles are fired) have been damaged or destroyed. But the missiles themselves, buried in dispersed underground sites, survived in much larger numbers than the public statements suggested.

Deep Analysis
Root Causes

Iran's missile survivability reflects two design choices made over 15 years of sanctions pressure. The IRGC Aerospace Force built geographically-dispersed underground storage — the buried launchers US officials acknowledge can be excavated — specifically anticipating an air campaign that could not sustain ground-level destruction of hardened sites.

The second factor is the Decentralised Mosaic Defence doctrine itself (ID:782): by devolving launch authority to autonomous provincial units, Iran reduced the command-and-control concentration that would make a decapitation strike operationally effective. A 50% launcher loss with dispersed warhead survival is a designed outcome, not a failure.

First Reported In

Update #65 · Iran lost its own minefield

Haaretz· 11 Apr 2026
Read original
Causes and effects
This Event
Half of Iran's missiles survive, WSJ reports
The rhetoric-versus-reality gap is becoming the war's most consistent pattern, and every future strike calculus must assume Iranian retaliation capability rather than a degraded one.
Different Perspectives
Global South governments (Indonesia, Brazil, South Africa)
Global South governments (Indonesia, Brazil, South Africa)
Neutrality was possible when the targets were military. 148 dead schoolgirls made it impossible — no government can explain that away to its own citizens.
Trump administration
Trump administration
Oscillating between claiming diplomatic progress and threatening escalation, while deploying additional ground forces to the Gulf.
Israeli security establishment
Israeli security establishment
Fears a rapid, vague US-Iran agreement that freezes military operations before the IDF achieves what it considers full strategic objectives. A senior military official assessed the campaign is 'halfway there' and needs several more weeks.
Iraqi government
Iraqi government
Iraq's force majeure is the position of a non-belligerent whose entire petroleum economy has been paralysed by a war between others — storage full, exports blocked, production being cut with no timeline for resumption.
Russia — Ambassador Vassily Nebenzia
Russia — Ambassador Vassily Nebenzia
Moscow calibrated its position between Gulf states and Iran: abstaining on Resolution 2817 rather than vetoing it, signalling it would not block protection for Gulf states, while refusing to endorse a text that ignores the US-Israeli campaign it regards as the conflict's proximate cause. Russia proposed its own ceasefire text — which failed 4-2-9 — allowing Moscow to claim the peacemaker role while providing Iran with satellite targeting intelligence, a duality consistent with its approach in Syria.
France — President Macron
France — President Macron
France absorbed its first combat death in a conflict it has publicly declined to join. The killing of Chief Warrant Officer Frion in Erbil forces Macron to choose between escalating involvement and accepting casualties from the margins.