Tehran SHOCK! U.S. Military JUST Deploys Something Superior To Unlocking the Strait of Hormuz
Tehran SHOCK! U.S. Military JUST Deploys Something Superior To Unlocking the Strait of Hormuz | Navy Vector
Could a midget submarine worth a few million dollars sink an entire, powerful US Navy fleet? As 5,000 Marines advance on Kharg Island, they don't know they are falling into a "killing zone" prepared with primitive weapons that the most modern radar cannot detect. Why did $8 million US Navy Tomahawk missiles fail against old shipping containers, and can Delta Force stop a global economic disaster before it's too late?
00:00 The US Navy's Deadly Mistake in the Persian Gulf?
01:20 Why is Billion-Dollar Radar "Blind" to Iran's Traps?
04:45 US Navy Tomahawk vs. Shipping Containers
07:12 The Moment the USS Somerset Was Hit
09:30 Delta Force and the F-35B: Who is Truly the Master of the Game?
13:15 Can the US Navy's SM-6 Stop Ballistic Missiles?
Coastal Tunnels of Iran Have Been COLLAPSED! Hundreds of Coastal Missiles Stuck in Tunnels
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Q8I5EIxqauo
Pirates MOVE IN FAST on US Navy — Then THIS Happened...
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uwCVj6oj63s
U.S. Military HAMMERS Iran Navy Ship – Stunning Footage Released
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zRTggmVZB0o
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Why the US Navy Won't Clear the Mines Even Though It CanWhy would the most advanced mine-hunting navy on Earth leave thousands of Iranian mines sitting on the floor of the Strait of Hormuz? The answer is a three-variable equation — and one of those variables is working FOR the Navy.
Iran deployed up to 6,000 naval mines across the strait that carries 20% of the world's crude oil. The US Navy possesses laser detection systems, unmanned robot vessels, acoustic decoys, and precision kill drones — four systems that can clear every mine without a single sailor in the water. So why haven't they?
Because the Navy doesn't solve headlines. The Navy solves equations. And this equation has three variables that must converge before clearance begins. In this breakdown, we explain the technology, the strategy, and the reason the mines are doing more damage to Iran than to anyone else.
Timestamps:
0:00 A $1,500 weapon that nearly sank a $2B warship
2:37 Why a mine that costs less than a jet ski can close 20% of the world's oil
06:37 Four machines that hunt mines without a single human in the water
12:02 The three variables nobody is talking about — and why the Navy is waiting
16:14 The mine is still listening. Here's how the story ends
How the US Navy Clears Sea Mines in the Strait of HormuzRising tensions with Iran have once again put the Strait of Hormuz at the center of global attention. This narrow waterway, only about 21 miles wide at its narrowest point, carries nearly 20% of the world’s oil supply every day.
One of the biggest threats in this region isn’t missiles or warships — it’s naval mines.
In this video we explore how the United States Navy detects and destroys sea mines, including the specialized ships, helicopters, and underwater drones used in mine countermeasure operations. From the Avenger-class mine countermeasures ship to underwater robots like the AN/SLQ-48 Mine Neutralization Vehicle, modern mine warfare is far more complex than most people realize.
We’ll also look at how mines are deployed, why they remain one of the most dangerous naval weapons in the world, and how the U.S. military protects shipping lanes in one of the most strategic waterways on the planet.
How do warships actually destroy sea mines?
How are shipping lanes reopened after a mine attack?
And what could happen if the Strait of Hormuz were suddenly mined during the Iran conflict?
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This channel is exclusively intended for entertainment, informative, and educational purposes. The content herein does not reflect the official positions or policies of the US Navy or any other naval units from various countries. The appearance of visual material from the U.S. Department of Defense (DoD) or other military sources neither implies nor constitutes an endorsement by the DoD or these organizations. Thumbnails may be exaggerated and the content might contain errors.
Why the US Navy Struck "Everything" on Kharg Except the OilOn March 13th 2026, the United States military struck over 90 targets on Kharg Island — Iran's most critical oil export hub. Bunkers, radar stations, runways, fast-attack boats — all obliterated. But somehow, $53 billion in oil infrastructure was left completely untouched. Why?
In this breakdown, we go layer by layer through the physics, geology, and strategy behind the most calculated strike in the Iran campaign. From B-2 Spirit stealth bombers flying 12,000-nautical-mile round trips to Tomahawk cruise missiles skimming the Gulf at Mach 0.74 — we analyze how the US dismantled Kharg's defenses while deliberately preserving its economic lifeline.
This was not restraint. This was not mercy. This was a five-layer strategic operation — and the untouched oil is the most dangerous weapon of all.
Timestamps:
0:00 $53 billion sitting untouched: the paradox nobody is asking about
2:05 The geology that made Kharg irreplaceable — and Iran's $2B pipeline that failed
5:29 Three waves, three branches: how Navy and Air Force opened the door
10:57 Five layers deep: why the oil you don't bomb is the most powerful weapon
15:42 The calculation with no good answer
Why the US Navy Rushed USS Tripoli to the Strait of HormuzThe US Navy broke 90% of Iran's military equation. Sixty warships destroyed. Missile factories in rubble. Two carrier strike groups hold the perimeter. But Hormuz is still closed — because the last 10% only needs one burning tanker to shut down the world's most critical shipping lane.
So why is the Pentagon rushing a ship that analysts once dismissed as a "failed experiment" — USS Tripoli, LHA-7 — through the South China Sea at high speed? What can 2,500 Marines do that 50,000 sailors and two supercarriers could not?
Timestamps:
0:00 The paradox: 90% solved, but Hormuz is still closed
2:29 The ship they called a "mistake" — and why they were wrong
6:20 Three scenarios: pocket carrier, island raids, and EABO
13:15 Iran's impossible dilemma: three defenses, three failures
16:02 Why Marines solve what carriers cannot
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The United States Navy is rapidly repositioning forces across the Red Sea, Eastern Mediterranean, and Arabian Sea, raising questions about what the next phase of the conflict with Iran could look like.
Following major naval strikes that disabled much of Iran’s surface fleet, multiple carrier strike groups and allied naval forces are now converging in the region. The movement of these assets suggests the possibility of a broader maritime operation that could extend beyond air and missile strikes.
According to reporting from US Naval Institute and U.S. Central Command, the USS Gerald R. Ford carrier strike group has moved into the Red Sea, while the USS George H. W. Bush strike group recently completed pre-deployment exercises and could deploy toward the region.
At the same time, European naval forces are increasing their presence. France has deployed the amphibious assault ship Tonnerre along with additional es**rts, while the United Kingdom and Spain have also positioned destroyers and frigates in nearby waters.
⚠️ In this video, we examine:
• Why multiple carrier strike groups are moving toward the Middle East
• The strategic role of naval forces in modern amphibious operations
• How submarine and cruise missile platforms shape maritime conflict
• Why Iran’s southern coastline is considered strategically critical
• The potential objectives near the Strait of Hormuz and Gulf of Oman
The positioning of these forces highlights the importance of sea control, logistics, and coalition naval coordination in large-scale military operations. With key maritime routes and energy infrastructure located near Iran’s southern coast, naval strategy is becoming central to the broader regional situation.
This analysis explores how naval deployments, amphibious capabilities, and maritime sec dynamics could influence the next phase of events in the Middle East.
Could this buildup represent preparation for a large knnnjbvvh
Why the US Navy "Already Won" Before Iran Knew It StartedIran spent forty years and billions of dollars building an air defense wall designed to deny American aircraft access to its airspace. Bavar-373, S-300, layered interceptors — the system was supposed to take weeks to dismantle. It lasted hours. Here's the engineering that explains why.
This is not a timeline — the exact minute-by-minute sequence is classified. But the physics behind each weapon's firing order is not classified. It is how machines work. Four phases, each creating the conditions for the next. Reverse any two steps, and the wall holds. Skip one, and the whole chain fails.
Timestamps:
0:00 Iran built a wall that should have lasted weeks — it didn't
1:53 The wall America spent 40 years studying
3:22 Four phases, one sequence — why order beats firepower
14:30 Stack the numbers: what it cost vs. what it destroyed
16:30 The sequence Iran never saw coming
Why the US Navy Is Letting Iran's Hormuz Blockade Destroy ItselfIran declared the Strait of Hormuz closed. Tankers are under attack. Oil prices near $100. Every military channel says Iran is winning. They're reading the wrong scoreboard.
400+ ballistic missiles on Day 1. 700+ drones. Ten days later? 40 missiles. 60 drones. A 90% collapse. Not restraint — the factories are rubble. Shahroud, Isfahan, Parchin — all gone. Navy Decoded breaks down the three extinction equations that prove Iran's blockade isn't strength. It's the last move of a nation running out of weapons it will never build again.
Timestamps:0:00 The war nobody is counting: 400 missiles became 40
2:10 Two wars, one equation: consumption vs. production
4:14 Three equations of extinction: missiles, drones, fast boats
11:03 The trade-off: why America chose to let ships burn
14:31 The equation with only one answer
Why the US Navy Still Won't Es**rt a Single Tanker Through Hormuz100+ oil tankers sit stranded outside the Strait of Hormuz. The US Navy just destroyed 90% of Iran's military in Operation Epic Fury — three carrier strike groups, over 3,000 targets hit — and STILL won't es**rt a single tanker through. Why? Because this isn't a test of firepower. It's a test of mathematics.
In this breakdown, we examine the engineering problem that no amount of bombs can solve: Iran's three-layer defense of the world's most critical shipping lane — mines on the floor, missiles from the ceiling, and fast boats on the walls. We show you why 90% destruction is not enough when es**rt demands 100% certainty. And we reveal the strategic insight most commentary misses: the trap Iran built to keep America out has also locked Iran inside.
Timestamps:
0:00 Why the world's strongest navy is sitting outside Hormuz, watching
1:38 The 6-nautical-mile hallway that carries 20% of global oil
4:29 What $1,500 mines, hidden launchers, and Ghadir submarines left behind
10:24 The geometry flip: how Iran trapped itself inside its own fortress
13:08 Why patience — not firepower — wins this war
Why the Navy's Secret Weapon May Have Already Fired in IranThe Navy unbolted the Phalanx CIWS from USS Spruance and replaced it with a smooth black dome they won't name. Drone debris from Epic Fury shows thermal signatures no missile warhead can produce. Was the Navy's directed-energy weapon already used against Iran?
We break down ODIN (the sensor killer that blinds drones through their own optics) and HELIOS (the 60-kilowatt laser that melts airframes for $1 per shot) — the physics, the cost math, the forensic evidence, and why the Pentagon's silence is itself a signal.
Timestamps:
0:00 The $5M missile vs $30K drone equation
2:34 Iran's interceptor trap: 96 cells vs 500 drones
5:30 ODIN burns a drone's retina through its own scope
14:51 HELIOS: the 60kW laser that melts airframes for $1
17:03 What the black dome on Spruance really means
Why The Third Carrier Is The One Iran Fears MostWhy did the US Navy split three supercarriers across three oceans instead of concentrating firepower? The answer isn't tactics — it's geometry.
In Operation Epic Fury, USS Abraham Lincoln and USS Gerald R. Ford launched the heaviest sustained aerial campaign since Iraq 2003 — not to overwhelm Iran with mass, but to engineer a geometric trap. When USS George H.W. Bush (CVN-77) crosses the Atlantic as the third vertex, the equation becomes unsolvable: three carriers lock three chokepoints, cutting Iran from oil revenue, weapons resupply, and every strategic lifeline.
This isn't a bombing campaign. This is a siege built from mathematics.
Timestamps:
0:00 The Paradox of the Missing Carrier
2:25 Three Chokepoints, One Coffin
5:20 The Engineering of Dispersion
12:00 The Siege — No Oil, No Weapons, No Escape
16:27 Why Geometry Beats Firepower
Inside Desert Storm: The Blueprint For Total Dominance (1991-2026) - Part 2The "Video Game War" was a lie. While the world watched surgical airstrikes on CNN, inside the cockpit, US Navy pilots were fighting a desperate battle against physics and a lethal anti-air trap known as "KARI". The 1991 air war wasn't the peak of technology—it was a deadly "Prototype" that nearly broke the pilots flying it.
In Part 2, we expose the fatal engineering flaws of the Desert Storm era. From A-10 pilots forced to hunt tanks through a "Soda Straw" screen to the manual "Switchology" nightmare that overwhelmed F-18 pilots in the heat of combat. We reveal how the dangerous "Laser Tether" turned jets into sitting ducks and why the "Low Altitude Sanctuary" was actually a su***de mission.
Witness the 40-second dogfight that killed the "Specialist" doctrine forever. We decode the evolution from the F-14's raw power to the F-35's "Sensor Fusion". This is the story of how the US Navy stopped fighting with geometry and started fighting with algorithms to achieve total domination.
Timestamps:
0:00 The Kinetic Lie - F-18 Hornet vs. Physics
3:11 The "KARI" Trap - Why Low-Level Tactics Failed
6:40 Vision - A-10 "Soda Straw" vs. F-35 "Sphere"
13:59 JSTARS & The F-14 Tomcat's Speed Run
16:45 The Extinction of the Specialist Aircraft
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