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US Admiral Claims Iran’s Military Threat ‘Dramatically Degraded’

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US Admiral Claims Iran’s Military Threat ‘Dramatically Degraded’ After War

Brad Cooper.jpg

A senior American military commander has declared that Iran’s ability to threaten the Middle East has been “significantly degraded” following months of US-led strikes, claiming Tehran’s regional power projection has suffered one of the biggest setbacks in the Islamic Republic’s history.

Speaking before a Senate committee in Washington, Brad Cooper, the head of United States Central Command, said Iran could no longer threaten its neighbours or American forces “in ways that they were able to do before.”

‘Across Every Domain’

Cooper painted a picture of an Iranian military machine battered from the air, economically squeezed and increasingly isolated from its proxy networks across the region.

“Iran has a significantly degraded threat,” the admiral told lawmakers.

“They no longer threaten regional partners, or the United States, in ways that they were able to do before, across every domain.”

The comments represent one of the strongest public assessments yet from the US military regarding the impact of the American-Israeli campaign against Iran, which has targeted missile facilities, air defence systems, drone infrastructure, naval assets and weapons factories since the war erupted earlier this year.

Cooper also claimed Iran’s defence industry had effectively been crippled, saying its military production capability had been set back by roughly 90%.

Iran’s Proxy Network Hit Hard

One of Washington’s key goals throughout the conflict has been severing Iran’s links to its regional allies and proxy forces.

According to Cooper, those efforts have largely succeeded.

He said Tehran is now struggling to move weapons, money and equipment to groups including Hezbollah in Lebanon, the Houthis in Yemen and Hamas in Gaza.

“Those transfer paths and methods have been cut off,” Cooper said.

That assessment comes after repeated US and Israeli strikes on suspected smuggling corridors stretching through Iraq, Syria and the Persian Gulf, alongside aggressive naval operations aimed at intercepting Iranian shipments.

Western officials believe Iran had spent years building a vast regional network capable of surrounding Israel and threatening Gulf states through proxy warfare rather than direct confrontation.

Questions Remain Over Iran’s Real Capabilities

Despite Cooper’s confident assessment, significant questions remain over how weakened Iran actually is.

Reuters and several other outlets have reported that US intelligence officials believe Tehran still retains sizeable missile and drone stockpiles hidden in hardened underground facilities.

Iran spent decades preparing for exactly this type of conflict, constructing extensive tunnel systems, dispersed launch sites and buried weapons depots designed to survive sustained bombing campaigns.

Cooper declined to directly address those reports during the hearing.

Military analysts also caution that while Iran’s conventional military infrastructure may have suffered enormous damage, asymmetric threats remain very much alive.

Iran has continued to demonstrate an ability to disrupt shipping lanes, conduct cyber operations and mobilise allied militias across the region even while under intense military pressure.

Strategic Victory — Or Temporary Pause?

The Biden and Trump administrations alike long viewed Iran’s regional influence as one of the greatest threats to Middle East stability, but the current conflict has fundamentally altered the balance of power.

The destruction of missile factories, air bases and logistics routes has undoubtedly weakened Tehran’s immediate military reach.

However, analysts warn that Iran’s leadership may now shift even more heavily toward guerrilla-style tactics, proxy warfare and covert retaliation rather than conventional military escalation.

Much may depend on whether the fragile ceasefire holds — and whether Tehran decides to rebuild quietly for another confrontation down the road.

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50 minutes ago, Social Media said:

US Admiral Claims Iran’s Military Threat ‘Dramatically Degraded’ After War

Brad Cooper.jpg

A senior American military commander has declared that Iran’s ability to threaten the Middle East has been “significantly degraded” following months of US-led strikes, claiming Tehran’s regional power projection has suffered one of the biggest setbacks in the Islamic Republic’s history.

Speaking before a Senate committee in Washington, Brad Cooper, the head of United States Central Command, said Iran could no longer threaten its neighbours or American forces “in ways that they were able to do before.”

‘Across Every Domain’

Cooper painted a picture of an Iranian military machine battered from the air, economically squeezed and increasingly isolated from its proxy networks across the region.

“Iran has a significantly degraded threat,” the admiral told lawmakers.

“They no longer threaten regional partners, or the United States, in ways that they were able to do before, across every domain.”

The comments represent one of the strongest public assessments yet from the US military regarding the impact of the American-Israeli campaign against Iran, which has targeted missile facilities, air defence systems, drone infrastructure, naval assets and weapons factories since the war erupted earlier this year.

Cooper also claimed Iran’s defence industry had effectively been crippled, saying its military production capability had been set back by roughly 90%.

Iran’s Proxy Network Hit Hard

One of Washington’s key goals throughout the conflict has been severing Iran’s links to its regional allies and proxy forces.

According to Cooper, those efforts have largely succeeded.

He said Tehran is now struggling to move weapons, money and equipment to groups including Hezbollah in Lebanon, the Houthis in Yemen and Hamas in Gaza.

“Those transfer paths and methods have been cut off,” Cooper said.

That assessment comes after repeated US and Israeli strikes on suspected smuggling corridors stretching through Iraq, Syria and the Persian Gulf, alongside aggressive naval operations aimed at intercepting Iranian shipments.

Western officials believe Iran had spent years building a vast regional network capable of surrounding Israel and threatening Gulf states through proxy warfare rather than direct confrontation.

Questions Remain Over Iran’s Real Capabilities

Despite Cooper’s confident assessment, significant questions remain over how weakened Iran actually is.

Reuters and several other outlets have reported that US intelligence officials believe Tehran still retains sizeable missile and drone stockpiles hidden in hardened underground facilities.

Iran spent decades preparing for exactly this type of conflict, constructing extensive tunnel systems, dispersed launch sites and buried weapons depots designed to survive sustained bombing campaigns.

Cooper declined to directly address those reports during the hearing.

Military analysts also caution that while Iran’s conventional military infrastructure may have suffered enormous damage, asymmetric threats remain very much alive.

Iran has continued to demonstrate an ability to disrupt shipping lanes, conduct cyber operations and mobilise allied militias across the region even while under intense military pressure.

Strategic Victory — Or Temporary Pause?

The Biden and Trump administrations alike long viewed Iran’s regional influence as one of the greatest threats to Middle East stability, but the current conflict has fundamentally altered the balance of power.

The destruction of missile factories, air bases and logistics routes has undoubtedly weakened Tehran’s immediate military reach.

However, analysts warn that Iran’s leadership may now shift even more heavily toward guerrilla-style tactics, proxy warfare and covert retaliation rather than conventional military escalation.

Much may depend on whether the fragile ceasefire holds — and whether Tehran decides to rebuild quietly for another confrontation down the road.

Inspired by SOURCE

It may be degraded, but still quite capable of inflicting major damage to surrounding Gulf states and of attacking shipping in the Strait of Hormuz.

Guy sure looks like he's got a broomstick up his ass.

Do you think they've got Trump on Adderall or amphetamines so he doesn't fall asleep during meetings in China?

OK we believe you, now you can all pack up and go home.

Of course the chap won't say the truth that America is openly getting a humiliation in the lagging war with Iran. If he does, Trump will go for him and he'll be handling the food supplies paperwork, in some remote US base in a scorched Saudi desert.

That is the problem with you Yanks You will not stand up and tell the Truth ! You are losing this war !!! being humiliated by a 3rd world country !!!

Then why is Trump 🤡 afraid to put boots on the ground ,it's not like

he gives a hoot about the soldiers ,what did he call them ,fools and

i dont see whats in it for them, plus more, General Bonespurs should

be at the front when they land at Kharg Island.

Thank you for your attention to this matter Worgeordie

Was Donald Trump his script writer?

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