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😔Iran Tried to Sink a U.S. Aircraft Carrier — 32 Minutes Later, Everything Was Gone See More

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The sky above the Strait became a chaotic lattice of smoke trails and intercept arcs. A dozen Iranian missiles lunged toward the carrier strike group, their supersonic profiles designed to overwhelm defenses through sheer volume and speed. But the Aegis-equipped destroyers escorting the Roosevelt responded with mechanical precision. Vertical launch systems thundered as SM-2 interceptors leapt into the sky, climbing fast before pivoting toward their targets. Combat information centers glowed with data streams as sailors tracked each hostile vector in real time.

On deck and below it, close-in weapons systems spun to life—automated cannons calculating trajectories faster than any human could blink. They spat streams of tungsten into the air, building walls of metal against incoming threats. Electronic warfare teams flooded the spectrum with jamming signals, deploying decoys meant to seduce missile guidance systems away from steel hulls and into empty sea. Every layer of defense activated in concert, a symphony of countermeasures refined through decades of doctrine.

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