Is the U.S. losing the missile war in Iran? Despite optimistic public statements from the White House regarding Operation “Epic Fury,” a new intelligence assessment suggests a much more complicated reality on the ground. Sources familiar with the latest data reveal that the United States can only confirm the destruction of about a third of Iran’s massive missile stockpile. This gap between political statement and military intelligence has many asking if the current strategy is failing to achieve its core objectives.
The Intelligence Gap
While President Trump recently claimed that Iran has “very few rockets left,” military analysts are sounding the alarm. If the U.S. has only neutralized a fraction of the arsenal, the risk to naval vessels in the Strait of Hormuz remains extreme. Experts point out that even a 1% survival rate for Iranian missiles could lead to the sinking of a billion-dollar American ship. This statistical uncertainty is the primary reason critics are debating whether the U.S. is losing the missile war in Iran, especially as the conflict enters its second month with no clear end in sight.

Hidden Strengths and Subterranean Bunkers
The difficulty lies in Iran’s extensive network of underground “missile cities.” Much like the tunnel systems seen in previous regional conflicts, these bunkers protect launchers from even the most sophisticated “bunker-buster” munitions.
- Confirmed Destroyed: ~33%
- Likely Damaged/Buried: ~33%
- Status Unknown: ~33%
The fact that Iran was able to fire 15 ballistic missiles at the UAE and target a base as distant as Diego Garcia suggests that their “neutralized” capacity might be overestimated. When a nation can still project power across the Indian Ocean after weeks of heavy bombardment, it fuels the narrative that the U.S. is losing the missile war in Iran by failing to achieve total air and missile superiority.
Conclusion
As the Pentagon continues to strike thousands of targets, the lack of a definitive “kill count” on the remaining two-thirds of the arsenal is a significant strategic hurdle. If the goal was a swift, decisive degradation of Iranian strike capabilities, the persistence of these weapons systems is a troubling sign. Until the U.S. can prove it has eliminated the threat lurking in those underground tunnels, the haunting possibility remains: Is the U.S. losing the missile war in Iran?













