EDITION |
Iran has rapidly restarted drone production during a six-week ceasefire, indicating its military industrial base is reconstituting much faster than US intelligence initially estimated, challenging claims about the long-term degradation from US-Israeli strikes. This swift rebuilding, including missile sites, launchers, and key weapons production capacity, means Iran remains a significant regional threat, particularly if President Donald Trump resumes bombing campaigns.
US intelligence suggests Iran could fully reconstitute its drone attack capability within six months, having "exceeded all timelines" for reconstitution. Factors contributing to this rapid recovery include support from Russia and China, with China providing missile components, and less damage inflicted by US-Israeli strikes than anticipated. Iran still possesses ballistic-missile, drone-attack, and anti-air capabilities, with an estimated two-thirds of missile launchers and 50% of drone capabilities intact, alongside coastal defense cruise missiles threatening the Strait of Hormuz. This contradicts CENTCOM commander Adm. Brad Cooper's testimony of 90% defense industrial base destruction and years for reconstitution, as intelligence indicates a setback of months, not years.
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