The Shield Is Gone — Iran Takes Out Four THAAD Systems Across the Gulf
The satellite images don’t lie. They rarely do.
Four coordinates and four confirmed strike sites. Four of America’s crown jewels in missile defence — the Terminal High Altitude Area Defense system, the AN/TPY-2 radar… the eyes of the entire Gulf air defence architecture — struck, charred, and in at least one case confirmed destroyed. The Pentagon won’t confirm it. Of course they won’t. “Due to operations security, we are not going to comment on the status of specific capabilities in the region.” That’s the institutional reflex of an empire that has just been handed a strategic shock it doesn’t know how to explain to the American people. So let's help do it for them shall we?
The Four Points of Impact
Saudi Arabia. Prince Sultan Air Base... coordinates 24.074218, 47.681327. March 1, 2026. Satellite imagery captured smoke rising from the radar compound. The tent sheltering the AN/TPY-2 antenna — that irreplaceable, monstrous X-band surveillance array that was pointed northeast toward Iran as recently as January — badly charred. Debris across the site. The system that was supposed to watch for incoming Iranian fire… was the first of the systems to burn.
UAE, Al Ruwais — 24.061942, 52.717325. Multiple structures struck directly. Pull-through vehicle shelters, the specialised housing built for radar trailers all hit. Buildings adjacent to where the AN/TPY-2 was stationed, damaged. Iran claimed the radar destroyed. The AN/TPY-2 radar component alone is valued at $500 million. Half a billion dollars. Per unit. Gone.
UAE, Abu Dhabi — 24.677595, 54.697818. Al Dhafra Air Base. Tightly clustered buildings and tents within the compound, heavily damaged. The base was struck again days later. Iran’s operational logic was not spray-and-pray. It was methodical, sequenced… surgical.
Jordan. Muwaffaq Salti Air Base — 31.801428, 36.758280. Over 500 miles from Iranian soil. The THAAD radar here was not just damaged. According to satellite imagery taken March 2 — debris surrounding a blackened AN/TPY-2 radar. Blackened. Confirmed struck. Confirmed destroyed. A system the Jordanians had only recently taken delivery of, newly positioned, newly operational… neutralised in the opening days of the conflict. Munitions specialist N.R. Jenzen-Jones of Armament Research Services told CNN: “The AN-TPY/2 radar is essentially the heart of the THAAD battery, enabling the launch of interceptor missiles and contributing to a networked air defence picture.” The heart excised.
The Arithmetic of American Vulnerability
Here is what the mainstream coverage won’t assemble for you into a single paragraph so we will.
The United States operates eight THAAD batteries total. Seven operational. Two of those seven were already committed to Israel before a single Iranian missile flew on February 28. Two systems in Israel. One in South Korea. One in Guam. That leaves… three batteries to cover the rest of the world. Three. The Indo-Pacific. The Gulf. The continental United States itself.
And now four THAAD radar systems, the irreplaceable nerve centres that make the batteries function, have been struck across the Arabian Peninsula. Prince Sultan. Al Ruwais. Abu Dhabi. Muwaffaq Salti. Even if the launchers survived and the evidence suggests they did not all survive intact — a THAAD battery without its AN/TPY-2 radar cannot engage targets. It’s a cluster of inert tubes in the desert. Expensive, inert tubes.
Translation? Iran didn’t try to out-intercept THAAD. It didn’t fire enough missiles to exhaust the interceptors (though that strategy was already working from the June 2025 twelve-day war, when the US burned through approximately 25% of its entire THAAD interceptor stockpile in under a fortnight). This time, Iran blinded the system. Took out the eyes and rendered the entire layered architecture not just degraded but operationally compromised across multiple theatres simultaneously.
The replacement timeline for a single AN/TPY-2 radar is not weeks. It is not months. Experts say replenishing high-end missile defence inventory at current American production rates could take three to eight years. Lockheed Martin produces THAAD interceptors at a rate of approximately eleven to twelve per year. Washington budgeted for thirty-seven in 2026… a number that was already insufficient before a single shot in this insane war with Iran was fired.
What Iran Actually Did Here
This is the part they don’t want discussed on CNN panels between retired generals collecting Raytheon cheques.
Iran did not attempt to overwhelm American missile defence with mass. Iran gamed and mapped it out. Tracked the radar signatures — those enormous AN/TPY-2 arrays (with a little help from big friends) draw roughly two megawatts of power, glowing like football stadium floodlights on any electronic intelligence sweep — located the physical sites with precision, and then, in a coordinated campaign spanning multiple sovereign territories simultaneously, destroyed the detection and fire-control infrastructure that makes the entire system work.
Bahrain. Qatar. Kuwait. Saudi Arabia. UAE. Jordan. Seven countries. Eleven confirmed US military sites damaged or destroyed since February 28. Radomes, satellite communications terminals. AN/FPS-132 early warning radar in Qatar — a $1.1 billion system, struck by ballistic missile. Camp Arifjan in Kuwait — six US service members killed when a drone hit the tactical operations centre. At Al Udeid, the nerve centre of American air operations across the region, the base was struck and struck again.
This is not the response of a cornered, desperate nation lashing out blindly. This is a country that spent years studying the architecture of American power projection in the Gulf, mapping every radar array, every SATCOM terminal, every communications radome, every THAAD compound… and then executed against that map with a precision that should disturb every strategic planner in Washington who told themselves Iran could be hit without consequence.
Pipelineistan– the control of energy flows IS the real sinew of geopolitical power in the region. The Iranians understand this better than anyone. They also understand Radarstan. They mapped every node of the American surveillance and interception grid across the Gulf… and they took it apart, systematically, from Jordan to Abu Dhabi.
The verdict here is not complicated at all. Washington committed the oldest blunder of the overconfident imperial power by assuming that striking first, striking hard, meant the adversary would absorb the blow and sue for terms. Instead, Iran executed a “counter-sensor” campaign — not trying to punch through the shield, but to dismantle the shield itself, node by node, before the interceptors even had a target picture to engage.
The Empire’s Exposed Flank
With two THAAD batteries locked into Israel and four radar systems destroyed or severely degraded across the Gulf, the United States now faces a position it has not faced in decades of Gulf deployments… a theatre where its most advanced missile defence architecture is half blind, partially inoperable, and facing an adversary that has just demonstrated it knows exactly where every piece of that architecture sits.
The three remaining US operational batteries outside the Middle East cover South Korea, Guam… and whatever domestic contingency the Pentagon has quietly maintained. That’s all she wrote. That is the full reach of a system that costs between $1 billion and $1.8 billion per battery, that takes years to produce, and that has now been publicly demonstrated by imagery visible to every military planner in Beijing, Moscow, Pyongyang, and Tehran — to be mortal via conventional precision munitions.
Mythology notwithstanding, the shield is not impenetrable. The shield, in four specific locations across the Gulf this week, is finito.
And in Washington, Pentagon press secretary Kingsley Wilson says the US military “is the strongest it has ever been.”
That tradition of imperial self-delusion is the only thing alive and well for the empire.
It is just increasingly difficult to sustain against the satellite imagery. They built an empire on the promise that its reach was infinite and its armour impenetrable… and this week, in four coordinates across the desert, that promise burned.








Brilliant article.
I made comments about the delusional claims made by Trump and his military in the last couple of days only to be attacked by sycophants.. Satellite images don't lie.. and... I am sure that Iran will be doing repeat strikes on these positions to make sure that they are beyond dead.
Meanwhile, the consumers of mainstream media, which now includes many a "conservative" outlet, are blissfully unaware of what is really going on.
They have no idea that the whitehouse and pentagon propaganda is playing them for fools.