Intel Suggests Iran’s Missiles Aren’t Gone
by SWJ Staff
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The Trump administration has been telling the public that Operation Epic Fury obliterated Iran’s military. The intelligence community is telling a different story.
The Reality
Classified assessments obtained by the New York Times and corroborated by CNN reporting indicate Iran retains roughly 70% of its pre-war missile stockpile—ballistic and cruise missiles included. More alarming, U.S. intelligence assesses that Iran has rebuilt 30 of 33 missile sites along the Strait of Hormuz. Former NATO Supreme Allied Commander James Stavridis called the finding “deeply surprising,” and noted it threatens both the Strait and Gulf Arab oil and gas infrastructure simultaneously.
The administration’s public posture does not square with what analysts and former commanders are saying on the record, let alone what classified assessments apparently show.
Two factors explain Iran’s resilience.
Five decades of investment in deep, redundant, underground infrastructure made comprehensive bomb damage assessment nearly impossible during the campaign.
Iranian missile units have also demonstrated the ability to operate on commander’s intent alone—continuing their mission without functioning command and control networks.
The Gap
Readers of this week’s Discourses on U.S. munitions stockpiles will recognize the second problem immediately. The U.S. burned through interceptor stocks at rates that would have only lasted another month, in certain cases. Iran, meanwhile, rebuilt 30 missile sites. That gap between offensive Iranian recovery and depleted American defensive capacity is the operational picture no one in Washington wants to say out loud.
https://smallwarsjournal.com/2026/05/15/intel-suggests-irans-missiles-arent-gone/