Iran, Weapons contractors
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Iran, Trump
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Operation Epic Fury enters a seventh day Friday as new video released by CENTCOM shows Iranian targets are being “decimated” by U.S. forces, who continue mission to “sink the entire Iranian Navy.”
Trump meets defense executives to accelerate weapons production as officials say U.S. has sufficient stockpiles for ongoing Iran military operations.
President Donald Trump has called a meeting Friday with defense contractors to try to speed up weapons production as his war in Iran burns through U.S. missile stocks. The president—who has ordered
1don MSN
Laser weapons deployed in Operation Epic Fury, as Space Force stops Iran’s missiles in their tracks
Iranian weapon debris, blown to pieces or mechanically crippled, keeps dropping from the Middle East sky. For that, we can thank heat-seeking satellites, military-grade malware and radar-jamming software,
Canadian and Australian prime ministers have called for a de-escalation of the Iran war but added the Iranians must never gain a nuclear weapon.
The U.S. will likely start to feel strain on its munition stockpiles if America’s war with Iran stretches beyond the four-to-five-week timetable laid out by President Trump. The Trump administration
Four days into war with Iran, at least one of the United States’ Gulf allies is already running low on crucial interceptor munitions used to defend against Iranian missile and drone attacks, two sources told CNN.
Reports indicate that more than 1,200 people have been killed in Iran, over 70 in Lebanon and around a dozen in Israel so far. Tehran has warned that continued hostilities could lead to widespread destruction of the Middle East's military and economic infrastructure.