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Operation Epic Fury: Trump Claims Iran's Navy Destroyed, Signals Cuba Is Next as War's Second Week Brings Expanding Ambitions and Mounting Costs

On the morning of February 28, 2026, at approximately 7:00 AM local time, the skies over Iran filled with American and Israeli ordnance. In what would become the largest B-2 operational strike in U.S. history, fourteen GBU-57 Massive Ordnance Penetrators slammed into Iran's underground nuclear facilities at Fordow and Natanz [1]. Tomahawk cruise missiles destroyed the Isfahan Nuclear Technology Center. Precision strikes leveled the compound of Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei. Within hours, a nation of 90 million people was decapitated of its most powerful figure, its nuclear ambitions set back by decades, and the entire Middle East plunged into a conflict whose end remains nowhere in sight.

Nine days later, the war has metastasized far beyond anything its planners publicly anticipated — and the president is already looking past Iran. At a summit at his Doral, Florida golf club on March 7, Trump boasted of destroying 42 Iranian naval ships "in three days," declared he had "done a favour to the world," and turned his sights toward the next domino: "Cuba is going to fall pretty soon" [2][3]. Russia is providing Iran with satellite intelligence to target American forces [4][5]. Oil has surged past $90 a barrel [6]. And the ghost of America's long history of regime change — from Tehran in 1953 to Baghdad in 2003 to Caracas just weeks ago — hangs over every decision still to come.

The Opening Salvo and the Killing of Khamenei

The coordinated operation carried two codenames — Operation Epic Fury (U.S.) and Operation Roaring Lion (Israel) — and four stated objectives: preventing Iran from acquiring a nuclear weapon, destroying its missile arsenal, degrading its proxy networks, and annihilating its navy. A fifth, political objective was stated openly: regime change from within [1].

The most dramatic achievement was the assassination of 86-year-old Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei. Using CIA intelligence, Israeli airstrikes targeted Khamenei at his residence compound in Tehran; Iran confirmed his death on March 1 [7]. On March 7, roughly 50 Israeli fighter jets dropped approximately 100 bombs on Khamenei's underground bunker, which the IDF said senior regime officials had been using as a command center [8].

The reaction inside Iran was starkly divided. President Masoud Pezeshkian called the killing a "great crime." Yet videos from Isfahan, Shiraz, and Kermanshah showed civilians celebrating in the streets [7]. By March 8, prominent clerics were urging the Assembly of Experts to swiftly elect a new supreme leader — though an Israeli strike reportedly hit the Assembly's office in Qom during an electoral session on March 3 [9].

"Knocked Out 42 Ships": Trump's Naval Claims and the Numbers

At the Shield of the Americas Summit on March 7, Trump delivered his most boastful assessment of the conflict to date. "We've knocked out 42 Navy ships, some of them very large, in three days," he said. "That was the end of the Navy" [2]. He added that the U.S. had destroyed Iran's air force and knocked out "all telecommunications" [10].

The claim marked a dramatic escalation from his own earlier statements. On March 1, Trump announced via Truth Social that nine Iranian warships had been "destroyed and sunk" [11]. By March 4, CENTCOM confirmed over 20 ships struck [12]. By March 5, CENTCOM commander Admiral Brad Cooper reported over 30 Iranian ships destroyed and confirmed that Iranian ballistic missile attacks had decreased by 90 percent and drone attacks by 83 percent since the war began [13][14].

The gap between Trump's 42-ship claim and CENTCOM's confirmed count of over 30 drew scrutiny. Analysts noted that Iran's entire regular navy comprises roughly 90 vessels, meaning Trump was claiming nearly half the fleet destroyed in 72 hours [15]. Specific vessels confirmed sunk include a Jamaran-class corvette at Chabahar pier, the light frigate IRIS Jamaran, corvettes IRIS Bayandor and IRIS Naghdi, and a Fateh-class coastal submarine near Bandar Abbas [16][17]. Iran's key naval base on the Strait of Hormuz was also set ablaze from strikes [18].

By Day 9, CENTCOM reported more than 3,000 targets struck inside Iran. Israel stated it had conducted approximately 2,500 strikes using over 6,000 munitions, claiming to have destroyed 80 percent of Iran's air defense systems [8][14].

Iranian Naval Vessels Destroyed: Official Counts vs. Trump Claims

"Cuba Is Going to Fall": The Next Domino

Trump's comments at the Shield of the Americas Summit did not end with Iran. Pivoting from his battlefield update, the president declared that Cuba's government would be the next to fall. "Cuba is gonna fall pretty soon, by the way, unrelated, but Cuba is gonna fall too. They want to make a deal so badly," he told CNN's Dana Bash in a March 6 interview [3][19].

The comments were not offhand. Senator Lindsey Graham had already laid the groundwork on Fox News on March 2, saying: "This communist dictatorship in Cuba? Their days are numbered. Cuba's next" [20]. At the Doral summit — attended by 12 Latin American heads of state including Argentina's Javier Milei and El Salvador's Nayib Bukele — Trump announced the Americas Counter Cartel Coalition and appointed former Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem as special envoy [21]. "The only way to defeat these enemies is by unleashing the power of our militaries," Trump told the gathered leaders [21].

The Cuba threat carries particular weight given the administration's recent record. In January, U.S. forces captured Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro in a predawn operation and transported him to New York. The administration installed acting-President Delcy Rodríguez and seized de facto control of Venezuela's state oil company [22][23]. That operation severed Cuba's primary oil lifeline — Venezuela had been Havana's main fuel supplier. With Cuba's economy already in collapse, Trump's language of a "friendly takeover" echoes the economic strangulation strategy that preceded the Venezuela intervention [24].

"Not Necessarily Democracy": Trump Redefines the War's Political Aims

In his CNN interview on March 6, Trump made a striking admission that reframed the political objectives of the war. Asked by Dana Bash whether he was insisting on a democratic Iran, Trump replied flatly: "No, I'm saying there has to be a leader that's going to be fair and just" [19].

This represented a significant shift from the administration's earlier rhetoric about supporting the Iranian people's aspirations. Trump said Iran's leadership had been "neutered" and expressed confidence in the ease of selecting a replacement — again comparing the process to Venezuela. "I have to be involved in the appointment, like with Delcy [Rodriguez] in Venezuela," he said in a separate Axios interview [25].

Trump singled out the leading candidate to succeed Khamenei, calling Mojtaba Khamenei — the 56-year-old son of the assassinated supreme leader — "unacceptable." The IRGC has been pressuring Assembly of Experts members to vote for Mojtaba, with commanders making "repeated contacts and psychological and political pressure" on members since March 3 [26]. If confirmed, the selection of Mojtaba would mark the first hereditary transfer of power since the 1979 revolution — and one that both Washington and significant segments of the Iranian public have preemptively declared illegitimate.

A Pattern Repeating: The History of U.S.-Installed Leaders

Trump's insistence on a role in choosing Iran's next government — and now his open targeting of Cuba — extends a pattern of American intervention whose historical returns have been measured in blowback, instability, and generational resentment [27].

In 1953, the CIA's Operation Ajax overthrew Iran's democratically elected Prime Minister Mohammad Mosaddegh. The Shah was restored to power, ruling as an authoritarian for 25 years — until the 1979 Islamic Revolution produced the very theocracy the United States is now bombing [27][28]. In 2003, the U.S. invasion of Iraq toppled Saddam Hussein, but the weapons of mass destruction that justified the war were never found. Disbanding the Iraqi military fueled an insurgency, sectarian civil war, and the rise of ISIS [28]. And in January 2026, the capture of Maduro achieved regime change in Venezuela — but left the U.S. managing a client state whose economy was already in ruins [22].

The through-line is consistent: removing a foreign leader is the easy part. What follows — the vacuum, the insurgency, the unintended consequences — is where American regime change has historically failed. Trump's explicit statement that he does not require democracy, only a "fair and just" leader amenable to U.S. and Israeli interests, suggests the administration has absorbed at least part of that lesson — but critics argue it makes the intervention more nakedly imperial, not less dangerous.

WTI Crude Oil Prices: January–March 2026

Russia Enters the War — From the Shadows

The most consequential military development of the war's second week was the revelation that Russia is providing Iran with intelligence to target American forces — the first indication that a nuclear-armed U.S. adversary is actively participating in the conflict [4][5].

According to the Washington Post, NBC News, and CNN, Russia has been passing Iran the locations of U.S. military assets, including warships and aircraft, since strikes began on February 28. Much of the intelligence comes from Moscow's satellite constellation, which provides targeting data faster and with more precision than Iran's own capabilities [4][5].

The White House sought to downplay the significance. Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt said the intelligence "clearly is not making a difference" given Iran's degrading military capacity [29]. But Senator Chris Murphy called it "an extraordinary escalation" that could "draw us into a broader confrontation with Russia at the worst possible time" [5].

The Strait of Hormuz, Oil, and Global Fallout

The IRGC formally announced the closure of the Strait of Hormuz on March 2, threatening any ship that passed through [30]. At least five tankers have been damaged and two crew killed [31]. Tanker traffic dropped to effectively zero, with over 150 ships anchored outside the strait.

WTI crude surged from $66.96 on February 27 to $90.90 by March 7 — a 36 percent spike in barely a week [6]. Analysts warn prices could breach $100. QatarEnergy halted activity at the world's largest liquefied natural gas export facility after it was targeted in an Iranian drone attack [32]. Airspace closures have led to over 4,000 daily flight cancellations [33]. By March 6, the United Nations declared the conflict a "major humanitarian emergency" affecting regions hosting nearly 25 million people [34].

Global Media Coverage: 'Iran War Trump' (GDELT Volume Intensity)
Source: GDELT Project
Data as of Mar 8, 2026CSV

The Human Cost Keeps Climbing

Iran's Foreign Ministry has claimed that strikes have hit 33 civilian locations, including hospitals, schools, the Tehran Grand Bazaar, and the historic Golestan Palace — a UNESCO World Heritage Site [35]. Israel began striking fuel storage sites in Tehran as part of a new phase of the war, with dramatic footage showing Mehrabad airport ablaze [36].

Preliminary casualty figures as of March 8 stood at more than 1,332 dead in Iran, at least 200 killed in Lebanon — including four people killed in a strike on a hotel in a popular tourist area of Beirut — 11 in Israel, and multiple fatalities across Gulf states [36][37]. Six American service members were killed on March 1 when a drone struck Port Shuaiba in Kuwait [38]. An 11-year-old Kuwaiti girl, Elena Abdullah Hussein, was killed when Iranian drone debris slammed into her room while she slept [39]. On March 8, an Iranian drone struck a government skyscraper in Kuwait City, sending massive flames through the building [40].

Ali Larijani, Iran's top security official, vowed continued retaliation, saying Iran "will not let Trump go" and that the president "must pay the price" [36].

What Comes Next

Nine days in, the war has achieved several military objectives: Iran's nuclear infrastructure is devastated, more than 3,000 targets have been struck, the supreme leader is dead, and Iran's navy has been reduced to a fraction of its former strength [14]. But the costs are accelerating — in American lives, in Gulf civilian casualties, in an oil shock not seen in decades, and in a widening theater that now stretches from the Indian Ocean to NATO territory.

Six developments now threaten to transform the conflict entirely. Russia's provision of targeting intelligence has introduced a great-power dimension that risks escalation beyond the Middle East [4][5]. Trump's demand for "unconditional surrender" has foreclosed diplomatic off-ramps [41]. His insistence on choosing Iran's next leader — while simultaneously admitting he does not require democracy — echoes a pattern of American intervention whose returns have been measured in blowback and instability [19][27]. The IRGC's push to install Mojtaba Khamenei as supreme leader sets up a direct collision with Washington's demand for a veto [25][26]. The war's spread to civilian infrastructure across the Gulf is pulling non-belligerent states toward a breaking point [40]. And Trump's open signaling that Cuba is the next target — backed by allied senators and a newly formed hemispheric military coalition — suggests that even as one war grinds on without resolution, the administration is already planning the next [3][20][21].

The question confronting American policymakers is one that history has answered before, but that each generation seems compelled to ask again: Can an outside power bomb its way to a better government in a country of 90 million people — and should it be planning the next intervention before the first one is over?

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