“60 Drones, 27 Attack Boats, and Hidden Submarines: The 12 Minutes That Nearly Sank U.S. Warships in the Strait of Hormuz.lh

Midnight Firestorm in the Strait
At 03:47 local time, the calm of the Strait of Hormuz shattered.
American radar operators watched in disbelief as more than 60 hostile aerial signatures materialized simultaneously from the darkness. Moments later, nearly 30 fast-moving surface contacts surged forward from multiple directions. The attack was not random. It was synchronized, deliberate, and overwhelming in scale.
Iran had launched a full-spectrum assault.
The first wave consisted of 63 unmanned aerial vehicles, flying low across the water to reduce radar visibility. Engineered for autonomous coordination, the drones operated like a hunting pack. Even if jammed or isolated, each unit could independently track and strike its target using onboard infrared systems and pre-programmed attack patterns.
Behind them came 27 high-speed attack craft, slicing through the confined waters at over 40 knots. Armed with anti-ship missiles and crewed by highly trained naval commandos, the boats advanced in a three-pronged pincer movement. Their objective was clear: overwhelm defensive systems through saturation and close to missile-launch range before being destroyed.

Onboard the U.S. destroyers USS Porter and USS Laboon, combat information centers erupted into controlled chaos. Threat boards glowed with airborne and surface contacts. Orders rang out: weapons free.
Electronic warfare struck first. Powerful jamming systems flooded the electromagnetic spectrum, attempting to blind navigation signals and sever coordination among the drone swarm.
The results were immediate. Several UAVs spun wildly, colliding midair or plunging into the sea. Yet most pressed on. Iranian engineers had anticipated electronic interference and built redundancy into the attack systems.
At 11 kilometers, American five-inch deck guns roared to life. The night sky flashed with muzzle bursts as precision-guided fire tore into the oncoming boats. One after another, Iranian vessels disintegrated in violent fireballs. Shockwaves rippled across the water as missile payloads detonated prematurely.

But the assault did not falter.
The remaining boats accelerated, weaving unpredictably to complicate targeting. Meanwhile, drones descended to roughly 50 meters above sea level, locking onto the heat signatures of U.S. ships. Phalanx Close-In Weapon Systems—radar-guided 20mm Gatling guns—began firing at 4,500 rounds per minute. Streams of tracer fire carved luminous arcs through the darkness. UAVs exploded midair, shredded by tungsten rounds.
At eight kilometers, surviving Iranian boats launched their missiles.
Twelve sea-skimming projectiles streaked toward the American destroyers. Rolling Airframe Missiles (RAM) launched in response, intercepting most of the threats mid-flight.
One missile slipped closer than the rest—just 800 meters from its target—before being obliterated in a last-second burst from a Phalanx gun. Its warhead detonated harmlessly hundreds of meters away, though the shockwave rattled hull and crew alike.
Five minutes into the engagement, the surface and air assault was collapsing. Dozens of drones destroyed. Nearly all fast attack craft eliminated.

Then came the chilling report from sonar: “Torpedo in the water.”
The true danger had been waiting below.
Two Iranian Kilo-class diesel-electric submarines had remained silent on the seabed, using the chaos above as cover. As the destroyers focused on aerial and surface threats, the submarines launched four heavyweight wake-homing torpedoes—designed specifically to kill surface combatants in confined waters.
Suddenly, the tactical equation changed.
Evading torpedoes required sharp maneuvers—yet maneuvering would reduce defensive fire against remaining threats. The Strait’s narrow geography offered little room for error.
Acoustic decoys deployed. Bubble curtains formed underwater to disrupt torpedo tracking. Engines roared at full power as the destroyers executed hard turns, attempting to present minimal target profiles.
Two torpedoes diverted toward decoys. Two remained locked on.

Helicopter support arrived at a critical moment. MH-60R Seahawks, previously orbiting at a safe distance, surged inward. Sonobuoys splashed into the water, triangulating submarine positions. Within moments, positive contact was confirmed.
An MK54 lightweight torpedo dropped from the first helicopter. Seconds later, a violent underwater explosion signaled the destruction of the first submarine. The second attempted to flee—its fatal mistake. Increased engine noise revealed its position. A second MK54 struck home.
Both submarines were eliminated within 90 seconds.
The final remaining Iranian torpedo, having lost lock, exhausted its fuel and sank harmlessly.
Twelve minutes after it began, the battle was over.
The Strait of Hormuz had become a graveyard of shattered drones, burning boats, and two sunken submarines. Remarkably, U.S. ships reported no casualties and only minor superficial damage. Integrated air, surface, and subsurface defenses had held against a coordinated multi-domain assault.

Yet the margin between victory and catastrophe had been razor-thin. Had the submarines launched seconds earlier—or maneuvered differently—the outcome might have shifted dramatically.
Strategically, the clash underscored two powerful realities. First, modern integrated defense systems—when synchronized across air, sea, and undersea domains—can withstand even massive asymmetric assaults. Second, submarines operating in confined waters remain one of the most dangerous threats to surface fleets, capable of altering outcomes in moments.
In just 12 minutes, a regional confrontation reshaped strategic calculations across the Persian Gulf. For military planners worldwide, the engagement became a stark case study in the evolving face of naval warfare—where swarms, stealth, and split-second decisions define survival.