4:25 PM — 132 MISSILES FIRED AT THE U.S. FLEET — IN 45 MINUTES, 85 ENEMY FACILITIES WIPED OUT!

Arabian Sea – At 4:25 PM today, Iran launched a mᴀssive, all-out missile ᴀssault, firing 132 ballistic and cruise missiles directly at the U.S. Navy carrier strike group in the Arabian Sea.

The barrage was the largest single attack on American naval forces in decades. Iranian state media immediately celebrated what they called a “historic victory.”

But what happened next was devastating.

In just 45 minutes, the United States unleashed a ferocious and precise counterstrike that completely overwhelmed Iran’s military infrastructure. Waves of F-35 Lightning IIs, B-2 Spirit bombers, and Tomahawk missiles from U.S. destroyers and submarines obliterated 85 Iranian military facilities, missile launch sites, radar stations, and command centers along the coast and deep inland.

Explosions lit up the Iranian coastline as entire bases were turned into rubble. Secondary detonations continued for over an hour as ammunition depots and fuel stores cooked off. U.S. Central Command described the response as “swift, overwhelming, and proportionate.”

While Iran claimed “significant damage” to the U.S. fleet, American officials confirmed the carrier strike group sustained zero damage and remains fully operational. Not a single U.S. sailor was injured.

President Trump addressed the nation shortly after: “They fired 132 missiles at us. We destroyed 85 of their bases in 45 minutes. Let that be a lesson.”

This lightning-fast exchange has dramatically shifted the momentum. Iran’s desperate attempt to strike American naval power has instead exposed the overwhelming superiority of U.S. forces and the extreme vulnerability of Iranian military infrastructure.

The regime that boasted about sinking American ships is now counting its own losses in the dozens of destroyed facilities.

The message from Washington is crystal clear: any attack on U.S. forces will be met with devastating and immediate force.

Iran just learned a very expensive lesson.