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The USA’s Tiny Strike On Iran

In the early hours of June 22, 2025, U.S. forces launched a highly controlled strike against three Iranian nuclear facilities. The attack, swiftly labeled a “spectacular success” by President Donald Trump, included what was publicly framed as a powerful show of military dominance. Yet beneath the surface of that message lies a curious arithmetic: thirty missiles and six bombs—thirty-six total weapons, exactly matching the strike capacity of the U.S. Navy’s Ohio-class guided missile submarines believed to be in the region.
This detail has not gone unnoticed by military analysts and geopolitical observers alike. The Fordow nuclear facility, buried more than 100 meters underground and widely considered among the world’s most fortified sites, was reportedly the main recipient of six Massive Ordnance Penetrators—GBU-57 bunker-busting bombs dropped from B-2 stealth bombers. Natanz and Isfahan, key components of Iran’s uranium enrichment and centrifuge programs, were hit by Tomahawk cruise missiles launched from submarines. The breakdown —six bombs and thirty missiles— raises the question: were all 36 weapons truly delivered from the sea?
A Small Amount Of Warheads
This numerical symmetry has led some to speculate that no bombs were actually dropped from the air at all. Instead, all 36 weapons may have been cruise missiles launched from submarines—possibly including modified munitions resembling bunker-busters in their effect, if not in form. If that were the case, the use of B-2 stealth bombers may have been a deliberate strategic mirage, part of a psychological operation to showcase American reach and resolve without exposing aircraft or aircrews to risk.
Adding to the ambiguity is the ongoing lack of independent verification. Satellite imagery confirming structural collapse at Fordow has yet to emerge. Iranian media has acknowledged that some damage occurred but has been vague about the nature and extent. The U.S. government, for its part, has released no images or footage of the attack, leaving the world to rely on secondhand reports, speculative interpretations, and presidential bravado.
The restrained nature of the attack is just as puzzling as its execution. Iran possesses far more than three nuclear or dual-use facilities, and yet only Fordow, Natanz, and Isfahan were targeted. No major missile bases, air defense sites, or government buildings were struck. There were no reported casualties. If the goal was to destroy Iran’s nuclear infrastructure, the strike was insufficient. If the goal was to send a message, the scale and style of the operation suggest it was meticulously calibrated to do so without provoking a regional war.
Real Or Rhetorical ?
This calculus becomes clearer when considering the political context. Trump, freshly reelected and eager to assert dominance without triggering endless war debates, had every incentive to craft an operation that looked powerful but stayed confined. By using every launch tube on a submarine and possibly framing all 36 munitions as both bombs and missiles, the administration could present the strike as massive and surgical. At the same time, the message to Iran was carefully hedged: we can reach you, but we are still choosing not to hit everything.
Whether the six bombs were real or rhetorical, their presence in the narrative serves a purpose. They give weight to the claim that even Fordow—the crown jewel of Iran’s nuclear deterrent—is no longer beyond reach. Yet, without verifiable damage assessments or crater analysis, the six bombs may have been six cruise missiles with special payloads or simply part of a symbolic payload capped neatly at 36.
The story of Trump’s “tiny strike” is therefore not just about military action but about perception management. In a world where appearances often rival reality, the decision to deploy exactly 36 weapons—no more, no less—was likely no accident. Whether those six bunker-busters ever left a bomb bay or not, the real payload may have been psychological. A warning, a performance, and a mystery—all in one.
The Intentional Smallness
What gives weight to the “tiny strike” thesis is that Iran’s nuclear infrastructure isn’t limited to just three sites. It operates dozens of facilities dispersed across the country—none of which were touched. Nor was the political or command structure disrupted. There were no mass casualties reported, and Iran’s retaliatory rhetoric has been muted compared to past flare-ups.
The precision and restraint suggest deliberate calibration. In fact, sources indicate the Pentagon presented President Trump with more aggressive options, including broad-spectrum strikes on missile bases, IRGC leadership targets, and even power grid components. He chose the narrowest route.
Strategic Rationale
- Symbolism Over Substance: By striking the most well-known nuclear sites—even if ineffectively—Trump could claim a “mission accomplished” moment without plunging into a full-scale war.
- Avoiding Escalation: A larger operation risked pulling in Hezbollah, Iraqi militias, and possibly even provoking strikes on Gulf allies or U.S. bases. The minimalist approach reduces blowback.
- Domestic and Electoral Calculus: With the 2024 election barely behind him, Trump may have wanted to fulfill hawkish campaign promises without alienating moderates or reigniting endless-war debates.
- Israel’s Shadow War: The strikes complemented Israeli operations that have been quietly targeting Iran’s proxies across the region. Trump’s move offered cover and solidarity without overt commitment.
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