Yesterday at 08:48 PM1 day New thread to discuss results, applicable lessons and armchair general’s opinions on the conflict. Politics for the other thread.My first salvo:UCAVs are needed now, up to full autonomous operations, less expensive persistent surface and air area denial, integrated with manned platforms. Suicide drones, more of them, conventional ones like LUCAS against fixed and large moving targets (ships) and new systems bringing direct anti personnel drones/loitering munitions linked to airborne C2 aircraft or linked to operators thru high altitude network enablers. Morale destruction and surgical targeting of the most odious members of the regime. More surface fleet combatants for naval control, greater presence over large/multiple areasBase defense and expedient shelter hardening capes growth, new decoy systems.
19 hours ago19 hr Author 36 minutes ago, Standby said:Not today ISIS.Yeah I get it but the unresolvable loop in the original Iran thread has reached a point where nothing more can really get done, besides there’s enough in the open source world to have discussions worth what it costs to access BO…The articles are starting to ask what this can teach us about a Taiwan scenario, what is China learning, etc….We should discuss the big elephants in the room. Edited 19 hours ago19 hr by Clark Griswold
7 hours ago7 hr I think air defense really shined. Now the question is how do you get a good mix of capabilities and cost. Patriot/THAAD are nice, but you can't afford to smack every shahed with one.Hardening critical infrastructure and capabilities to prevent easy kills by cheap systems is looking wise, as well.
6 hours ago6 hr Author 4 minutes ago, raimius said:I think air defense really shined. Now the question is how do you get a good mix of capabilities and cost. Patriot/THAAD are nice, but you can't afford to smack every shahed with one.Hardening critical infrastructure and capabilities to prevent easy kills by cheap systems is looking wise, as well.ConcurThe offense defense tango continues, offense is throwing mass cheap systems and the challenge to defense is how to answer that.Probably an all of the above is the best feasible optionDefensive systems, decoys, mobile low footprint systems, etc…It seems you need a force that is composed of opposite ends of a value spectrum, some high end exquisite systems to kick things off, medium systems level and a shit ton of cheap attrition tolerant mass to constantly throw at your opponent Edited 6 hours ago6 hr by Clark Griswold
4 hours ago4 hr We still kick ass when it comes to CSAR! 👍👍For a laugh, I asked Copilot (the AI, not the guy in the right seat!) which is about as deep as we want to get on here...U.S. MILITARY LESSONS LEARNED – OPERATION EPIC FURY1. BLUFOperation EPIC FURY validated U.S. dominance in joint high‑intensity warfare but highlighted critical vulnerabilities in missile defense capacity, force protection, logistics endurance, and partner integration under sustained saturation attacks.2. OPERATIONAL OVERVIEWStart: 28 Feb 2026Lead: U.S. Central Command (CENTCOM)Mission: Destroy Iranian missile capability, naval forces, and defense industrial base to prevent power projection and nuclear breakout.Scope: Large‑scale joint, combined air–maritime–cyber campaign against a peer‑capable regional adversary.3. KEY LESSONS LEARNEDA. JOINT INTEGRATION WORKS—BUT REQUIRES SCALEObservationU.S. forces achieved rapid air superiority, effective SEAD, and joint fires synchronization across domains.LessonJoint integration is a decisive advantage, but only when properly resourced for sustained operations, not short campaigns.F‑35, long‑range bombers, submarines, and ISR platforms dominated early phases.ImplicationFuture conflicts with peer adversaries will require:Larger munitions stockpilesFaster reconstitutionBroader distributed basingB. MISSILE AND DRONE SATURATION IS THE PRIMARY THREATObservationIran employed mass volleys of missiles and drones, overwhelming regional defenses despite high intercept rates.LessonInterceptor inventories are finiteMissile defense success is measured in resilience, not perfectionSaturation attacks still produced casualties and infrastructure disruptionImplicationThe U.S. must:Expand interceptor productionIntegrate regional air/missile defense (IBCS‑like systems)Harden bases and civilian infrastructureC. CYBER AND SPACE ARE NOW FIRST-MOVE DOMAINSObservationCyber and space effects were employed before kinetic strikes, degrading enemy C2, sensors, and communications.LessonCyber is no longer a supporting arm—it is a primary maneuver elementPre-positioned access is decisiveImplicationCyber operations must be planned at campaign levelRequires persistent access, legal frameworks, and resilient U.S. cyber defensesD. LOGISTICS AND SUSTAINMENT LIMIT CAMPAIGN LENGTHObservationThe operation consumed massive quantities of:Precision munitionsFuelISR flight hoursHuman endurance resourcesLessonThe U.S. can strike faster than it can sustain at current industrial capacity.ImplicationIndustrial surge capacity is now a combat enablerFuture wars will be won by logistics endurance, not opening salvosE. FORCE PROTECTION REMAINS A VULNERABILITYObservationU.S. personnel suffered hundreds of wounded and multiple fatalities, primarily from missile attacks on regional bases.LessonEven with air superiority, fixed bases are vulnerable.ImplicationExpand dispersal, deception, and hardened infrastructureImprove warning and sheltering procedures across AORsF. PARTNER NATIONS ARE BOTH STRENGTH AND LIABILITYObservationGulf partners enabled access but suffered direct retaliation and infrastructure damage.LessonAllies require integrated—not parallel—defense architectures.ImplicationDefense cooperation must include shared command-and-control, not just basing agreements4. STRATEGIC TAKEAWAYSU.S. dominance is real—but not inexhaustibleMass matters again (munitions, interceptors, logistics)Cyber-first warfare is now normalMissile defense determines societal resilienceCampaign durability—not shock—is the decisive variable5. WAY AHEAD (RECOMMENDED ACTIONS)Expand munitions and interceptor production linesIntegrate cyber deeply into joint campaign planningInvest in regional missile-defense integrationHarden and disperse critical basingReform industrial mobilization planning
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