B-2 Bombers Deliver Crushing Blow to Iran's Missile Machine
American B-2 stealth bombers hammered Iran's underground missile network in overnight strikes on March 28, destroying three IRGC missile production facilities and one major storage site.
This marks the regime's heaviest arsenal loss yet in the ongoing campaign. U.S. Central Command confirmed precision strikes on hardened targets, backed by satellite imagery showing extensive damage.
The video circulating with the report captures B-2s roaring off a desert runway with afterburners blazing, consistent with long-range missions launched from bases like Andersen in Guam or Whiteman in Missouri. These invisible giants flew undetected, dropping bunker-busters that penetrated deep into mountain tunnels and caves where the mullahs hid their B-M factories.
This is no isolated hit. It's part of a relentless U.S.-Israel effort that has already gutted over two-thirds of Iran's missile, drone, and naval production capacity. Launch rates have plunged by 90 percent. The ayatollahs' dream of overwhelming Israel and the region with rockets is going up in smoke, one precision strike at a time.
No more safe havens for terror infrastructure. America is showing resolve where it counts: degrading the regime's ability to threaten allies or rebuild its arsenal. The IRGC's underground empire is collapsing, and the message is clear: keep pushing, and more will follow.