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Losing Four THAAD Radars in a Day Changes Every Pentagon War Calculation

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If Iran strikes on THAAD radars are confirmed, they set a precedent that American missile-defense infrastructure can be attrited in sustained conflict. That dismantles the US deterrence doctrine that relies on preserving these systems intact.

THAAD Attrition Sets a New Precedent

For decades, US missile defense doctrine assumed that THAAD batteries and their AN/TPY-2 radars would survive long enough to matter. The system was designed to intercept ballistic missiles, not to withstand sustained bombardment. Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps claimed in early March 2026 to have destroyed four advanced THAAD radar systems within 24 hours across the Gulf region. Press TV reported strikes at al-Rubah, al-Ruwais, al-Kharj, and Azraq. Satellite imagery from Ansar Press showed damage to installations in Jordan and the UAE. YouTube coverage from WION documented the claims. Whether every claim is verified or not, the precedent is set: American missile-defense infrastructure can be attrited.

The Pentagon Doctrine Assumed Preservation

The US Ballistic Missile Defense System relies on a layered architecture. THAAD occupies the middle tier – defending larger areas than Patriot while serving as an underlay for exoatmospheric systems. The AN/TPY-2 radar is the critical node; without it, launchers are tactically blind. Defence Security Asia reported that destroying these radars left replacement THAAD launchers unable to receive accurate targeting data. The Atlantic noted the US expended roughly a quarter of its THAAD missiles during a 12-day conflict, with production at only 96 missiles annually. The Pentagon war calculus assumed these systems would remain operational. Iran proved they can be taken offline faster than they can be replaced.

Deterrence Relied on Systems Staying Intact

US deterrence in the Gulf rested on the promise that allied territory would be defended. THAAD was the visible guarantee. The Straits Times reported the US operates only eight THAAD batteries globally, below the force requirement of nine. Losing four radars in a day – if confirmed – means half the regional radar capacity could be degraded in 24 hours. The CSIS Missile Threat project documents that THAAD achieved a perfect test record in production phase, but real combat against a peer adversary with ballistic missile inventory was never the design scenario. Iran has changed the rules.

What This Actually Means

Every Pentagon war game that assumed THAAD would hold is obsolete. The doctrine that relied on preserving missile-defense infrastructure intact has been dismantled by evidence – whether fully confirmed or not – that these systems can be attrited in sustained conflict. The next calculation for US Central Command is not how many interceptors to deploy, but how to defend the radars that make interceptors useful. That is a different war.

Sources

Press TV, Ansar Press, Defence Security Asia, The Atlantic, The Straits Times, CSIS Missile Threat

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