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US military involvement in Iran 'not open-ended': Hegseth

US military involvement in Iran 'not open-ended': Hegseth

US Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth says the US strike was a targeted mission and called for an immediate peace settlement.

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Decoys, bunker-busters and stealth bombers: How America attacked Iran
Decoys, bunker-busters and stealth bombers: How America attacked Iran

The Age

time2 hours ago

  • The Age

Decoys, bunker-busters and stealth bombers: How America attacked Iran

The US strikes that targeted Iran's nuclear sites involved a decoy mission aimed at drawing attention from flight trackers as the largest-ever deployment of B-2 stealth bombers dropped 30,000-pound bunker-buster bombs for the first time in combat. The operation – dubbed 'Midnight Hammer' – was detailed by top Pentagon officials on Sunday night (AEST). They described an extensive operation that included 125 aircraft overall, strikes by Tomahawk missiles launched from a US submarine and the use of 14 massive ordnance penetrator – or bunker-buster – bombs. The heart of the 37-hour operation was a feint in which a group of B-2 bombers flew west across the Pacific Ocean as decoys to maintain tactical surprise, according to Defence Secretary Pete Hegseth. News reports on Saturday morning that picked up on flight-tracker data suggested those planes were being deployed as a way to strong-arm Iran into fresh talks on its nuclear program. While those planes got all the attention, another group of B-2s flew east carrying the bunker-busters. The officials said dozens of air-refuelling tankers, a guided missile submarine, and fourth- and fifth-generation fighters were involved in the attack, which struck nuclear Iran's facilities at Fordow, Isfahan and Natanz. The briefing helped explain other data points that emerged in recent days, including a massive move by midair refuelling tankers last week that was widely reported at the time. The White House had promised on Thursday that President Donald Trump would make a decision on a strike 'within two weeks,' suggesting there might be more time. In the end, the operation on Sunday (AEST) was deemed a success by the Pentagon. No Americans were lost and Iran didn't fire at any of the US military assets, according to the officials.

Decoys, bunker-busters and stealth bombers: How America attacked Iran
Decoys, bunker-busters and stealth bombers: How America attacked Iran

Sydney Morning Herald

time2 hours ago

  • Sydney Morning Herald

Decoys, bunker-busters and stealth bombers: How America attacked Iran

The US strikes that targeted Iran's nuclear sites involved a decoy mission aimed at drawing attention from flight trackers as the largest-ever deployment of B-2 stealth bombers dropped 30,000-pound bunker-buster bombs for the first time in combat. The operation – dubbed 'Midnight Hammer' – was detailed by top Pentagon officials on Sunday night (AEST). They described an extensive operation that included 125 aircraft overall, strikes by Tomahawk missiles launched from a US submarine and the use of 14 massive ordnance penetrator – or bunker-buster – bombs. The heart of the 37-hour operation was a feint in which a group of B-2 bombers flew west across the Pacific Ocean as decoys to maintain tactical surprise, according to Defence Secretary Pete Hegseth. News reports on Saturday morning that picked up on flight-tracker data suggested those planes were being deployed as a way to strong-arm Iran into fresh talks on its nuclear program. While those planes got all the attention, another group of B-2s flew east carrying the bunker-busters. The officials said dozens of air-refuelling tankers, a guided missile submarine, and fourth- and fifth-generation fighters were involved in the attack, which struck nuclear Iran's facilities at Fordow, Isfahan and Natanz. The briefing helped explain other data points that emerged in recent days, including a massive move by midair refuelling tankers last week that was widely reported at the time. The White House had promised on Thursday that President Donald Trump would make a decision on a strike 'within two weeks,' suggesting there might be more time. In the end, the operation on Sunday (AEST) was deemed a success by the Pentagon. No Americans were lost and Iran didn't fire at any of the US military assets, according to the officials.

How the US struck Iran's nuclear facilities in Operation Midnight Hammer
How the US struck Iran's nuclear facilities in Operation Midnight Hammer

ABC News

time3 hours ago

  • ABC News

How the US struck Iran's nuclear facilities in Operation Midnight Hammer

When America's B-2 bombers took off from a military base in Missouri and some of them made their way towards the Pacific, flight tracking enthusiasts had noted that was unusual and it would turn out to be intentionally so. The United States had launched a B-2 bomber "strike package" but to maintain tactical surprise, some of the aircraft very visibly proceeded West and into the Pacific "as a decoy". "The main strike package, comprised of seven B-2 spirit bombers, each with two crew members, proceeded quietly to the east with minimal communications throughout the 18-hour flight into the target area," General Dan Caine said at a Pentagon briefing on Sunday morning, local time. Any movement of those B-2 aircraft would have been closely watched because these are the war machines capable of delivering the so-called "bunker busting bombs" that Israel has been wanting deployed in its war against Iran. Each bomber can carry two "massive ordinance penetrators" bombs in its weapons bay and as the group of B-2s broke east towards Iran they were fully loaded. After taking off at midnight on Saturday, local time, the B-2s were joined by an escort "support package" 17 hours later, and from there it was just less than two hours until they would be over their targets. "The aircraft completed multiple in-flight refuelling. Once overland, the B-2 linked up with escort and support aircraft in a complex tightly timed manoeuvrer requiring exact synchronisation ... in a narrow piece of airspace, all done with minimal communications," General Caine said. At the same time, a US submarine in the region "launched more than two dozen Tomahawk land attack cruise missiles against key surface infrastructure targets", he said. "As the Operation Midnight Hammer strike package entered Iranian airspace, the US employed several deception tactics, including decoys, as the [escort] aircraft pushed out in front of the strike package at high altitude and high speed, sweeping in front of the package for enemy fighters and surface to air missile threats." By early Saturday evening Washington time, the B-2s and their escorts crossed into Iranian airspace. We now know the specific targets for this mission were the Fordow, Natanz, and Isfahan nuclear sites. The decoys were set, the three components of American military had come together and were now making their way to their targets to drop the massive payload on the facilities the US and Israel believe are critical to Iran's nuclear potential. At approximately 6:40pm, Washington time, the lead B-2 dropped two massive ordnance penetrator (MOPs) weapons on the first target, which was the Fordow nuclear facility. "The remaining bombers then hit their targets as well, with a total of 14 MOPs dropped against two nuclear target areas. All three Iranian nuclear infrastructure targets were struck between 6:40pm and 7:05pm Eastern Time," General Caine said. "The Tomahawk missiles being the last to strike ... to ensure we retain the element of surprise throughout the operation." Once the bombs had been released, the aircraft left Iranian airspace and the "package began its return home". General Caine called the decoy move a "deception effort" and said it was only known to an "extremely small number of planners and key leaders" in Washington and Tampa, Florida where the US Central Command is based. US President Donald Trump and Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth have said the targets were obliterated, but are yet to provide evidence of the extent of the damage. General Caine was more measured, saying damage assessments would take some time, but that: "initial battle damage assessments indicate that all three sites sustained extremely severe damage and destruction." Inside Iran, state media initially downplayed the damage, saying they had prepared for the attack, but it is also hard to verify those claims. General Caine said throughout the mission, the US retained the element of surprise. "Iran's fighters did not fly and it appears that Iran's surface to air missile systems did not see us," he said. The president of the United States had spent the week seemingly racing towards a decision on whether to strike inside Iran, only then to issue a single-line statement via his press secretary that he would give himself two weeks to make the decision. In the end, he took two days. And from details released on Sunday, local time, at the Pentagon, it appears that the US plan to send its finest war machines to bomb a former ally was very much ready, just waiting to be put in motion. Mr Hegseth said: "This mission was not and has not been about regime change." "The president authorised a precision operation to neutralise the threats to our national interests posed by the Iranian nuclear program and the collective self-defence of our troops," he said. 'The United States does not seek war. But let me be clear we will act swiftly and decisively when our people, our partners or our interests are threatened." ABC

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