The US sold THAAD to Gulf allies as an impenetrable shield. Iran destroying four radar systems in 24 hours exposes that the defensive infrastructure protecting these bases was built more to reassure allies than to survive a real war.
THAAD Was Sold as Impenetrable – Iran Proved Otherwise
When the US deployed Terminal High Altitude Area Defense systems across the Gulf – in the UAE, Jordan, Saudi Arabia – the pitch was clear: these radars and interceptors would make allied territory a no-go zone for ballistic missiles. The AN/TPY-2 radar, valued at roughly 300 million dollars per unit, was described as the eyes of the defense network. As YouTube coverage from WION and other outlets showed in early March 2026, Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps claimed to have destroyed four advanced THAAD radar systems within 24 hours, striking installations in al-Rubah, al-Ruwais, al-Kharj, and Azraq. Satellite imagery from Ansar Press and other sources showed damage to THAAD sites in Jordan and the UAE, with 13-foot craters at Muwaffaq Salti Air Base. US and UAE officials have not independently confirmed the full scope of Iranian claims, but the pattern is unmistakable: the shield that was supposed to be untouchable was not.
The Reassurance Doctrine Has Collapsed
Foreign Policy reported in March 2026 that Gulf states publicly maintained neutrality and prohibited use of their territories for offensive operations against Iran – yet they became operationally entangled once hostilities began. US military installations and Gulf civilian infrastructure became targets. The THAAD systems were part of a layered defense architecture sold to Riyadh, Abu Dhabi, and Amman as insurance. Saudi Arabia inaugurated its first fully operational THAAD battery in July 2025, according to Al Arabiya. The UAE hosted multiple units. The Atlantic noted that the US expended roughly a quarter of its THAAD missiles during a 12-day conflict, and at current production rates of only 96 missiles annually, replacement is dangerously slow. The systems were never designed for sustained attrition warfare.
What the Radar Losses Actually Mean
Defence Security Asia reported that destroying the AN/TPY-2 radars left replacement THAAD launchers tactically blind – without functional radars, even fresh interceptors cannot receive accurate targeting data. The Straits Times noted that the US operates only eight THAAD batteries globally, below its established force requirement of nine. Iran’s strikes did not just damage hardware; they degraded the entire US-Israeli missile defense network in the region. The IRGC stated that the eyes of the US and the usurping Zionist regime in the region have been blinded. Whether or not that claim is fully accurate, the symbolic blow is real: the impenetrable shield was penetrable.
What This Actually Means
THAAD was sold to Gulf allies as a guarantee. It was a political product as much as a military one – proof that Washington would protect its partners. Iran’s ability to strike four radars in 24 hours, whether fully confirmed or not, shatters that narrative. The defensive infrastructure was built to reassure, not to withstand a determined adversary with ballistic missile inventory. Gulf states that host US assets are now exposed. The next calculation for Riyadh and Abu Dhabi is not whether THAAD works in theory, but whether hosting it makes them targets without a shield that can hold.
Sources
Eastern Herald, Press TV, Ansar Press, Foreign Policy, The Atlantic, Al Arabiya