At 4:00 a.m. on February 8th, 2026, the USS Abraham Lincoln cut steadily through international waters roughly 90 miles off the Iranian coast. The 100,000-ton nuclear-powered supercarrier, stretching 1,092 feet long and rising nearly 20 stories above the sea, carried 5,000 sailors and 75 aircraft. F/A-18 Super Hornets sat ready on deck alongside E-2D Hawkeyes and EA-18G Growlers. It was a routine freedom-of-navigation patrol, the kind the U.S. Navy had conducted for decades to keep vital shipping lanes open.
The night was calm. Radar screens glowed softly inside the Combat Information Center. Destroyers USS Gravely, USS Porter, USS Carney, and USS Mason maintained their protective screen 10 to 20 miles from the carrier, their Aegis combat systems scanning continuously. Beneath the surface, the guided-missile submarine USS Florida lingered silently, 154 Tomahawk cruise missiles loaded in its vertical launch tubes. The strike group was prepared—but no one aboard expected the test to come so suddenly.Pause
Seventy-two hours earlier, intelligence briefings at Fifth Fleet headquarters in Bahrain had painted a troubling picture. Satellite imagery revealed unusual activity at Iranian coastal missile sites near Bandar Abbas. Khalij Fars anti-ship ballistic missiles—often described by Iran as “carrier killers”—had been moved into launch positions. Signals intelligence intercepted encrypted communications between Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps units, suggesting imminent action. The assessment was blunt: Tehran might attempt a strike designed to force the carrier from the Gulf and demonstrate regional dominance.
The decision from Admiral Thompson was equally blunt. Maintain position. Increase readiness. If attacked, defend and retaliate immediately.
That preparation proved decisive.
At 3:58 a.m., thousands of miles above Earth, a Defense Support Program satellite detected eight sudden infrared flares along Iran’s southern coast. Within seconds, data streamed to the strike group: ballistic missile launches confirmed. Trajectory calculations followed almost instantly. Eight Khalij Fars missiles were climbing fast, accelerating toward Mach 5—over 3,800 miles per hour—on a direct path toward the USS Abraham Lincoln.
Inside the carrier, alarms pierced the silence. “Ballistic missile launch detected. Eight inbound.” General quarters was sounded. Five thousand sailors moved with rehearsed precision. Watertight doors sealed. Pilots sprinted to aircraft. Damage control teams prepared for impact that, according to early projections, could come in just four minutes.
Iran’s plan was built on speed and shock. Each missile carried a 1,400-pound warhead and a maneuverable reentry vehicle designed to adjust its trajectory during descent. Tehran’s calculation was simple: a 100,000-ton carrier could not evade in time, and Mach 5 weapons would overwhelm any defense. Eight simultaneous impacts, Iranian commanders believed, would cripple or sink the flagship, kill thousands, and shatter American credibility in the region.
But the carrier was not alone—and it was not defenseless.
USS Gravely responded first. Its Aegis system locked onto all eight targets. The captain ordered weapons free. Sixteen SM-6 interceptors—two per incoming missile under a shoot-look-shoot doctrine—erupted from vertical launch cells in rapid succession. The missiles climbed hard, their dual-mode seekers designed specifically to counter maneuvering ballistic threats.
Seconds felt like minutes as the interceptors raced upward.
The first explosion flashed high above the Gulf as an SM-6 struck the lead Iranian missile. Debris scattered in the darkness. Almost immediately, three more intercepts followed. Four down. Four remaining. The timeline compressed mercilessly—less than a minute before potential impact.
Gravely’s second wave engaged. Another Khalij Fars missile disintegrated, then another. Two remained. USS Porter joined the defense, launching additional SM-6s as the final Iranian warheads descended rapidly. At roughly 10 miles from the carrier, one evaded its first interceptor. A second SM-6 adjusted mid-course, corrected its track, and slammed into the target eight miles out. A final explosion marked the destruction of the eighth and last missile.
At 4:04 a.m., just four minutes after launch detection, all eight Iranian ballistic missiles had been destroyed. None came within five miles of the Lincoln. No debris struck the carrier. There were zero casualties.
The relief onboard lasted only seconds.
The order for retaliation came swiftly. Within minutes, 12 F/A-18 Super Hornets thundered down the carrier’s catapults, armed with AGM-88 HARM anti-radiation missiles and precision-guided JDAM bombs. Their targets were clear: the radar installations and launch sites responsible for the attack.
By 4:20 a.m., the strike package reached the Iranian coastline. HARM missiles streaked toward active radar emissions, homing in with deadly accuracy. Six radar sites were hit almost simultaneously, blinding segments of Iran’s coastal defense network. JDAMs followed, smashing into four missile launch facilities. Secondary explosions rippled through the darkness, indicating ammunition detonations.
Meanwhile, USS Florida received authorization to strike additional targets. Twenty-four Tomahawk cruise missiles burst from beneath the surface, arcing toward eight preprogrammed command centers and ammunition depots. Flying low and fast, they impacted shortly before 4:50 a.m., igniting massive blasts visible for miles.
Twenty-eight minutes after Iran’s initial launch, the engagement was complete.

Eight ballistic missiles fired. Eight destroyed. Zero hits. Zero American casualties.
In return, 18 Iranian facilities were eliminated. Intelligence assessments later estimated that roughly 30 percent of Iran’s coastal anti-ship missile capability had been crippled. Dozens of IRGC personnel were reported killed or wounded. The financial cost to Tehran ran into the hundreds of millions of dollars, not including the strategic damage of a failed high-profile attack.
For the United States, 16 SM-6 interceptors had been expended, along with HARMs, JDAMs, and Tomahawks totaling tens of millions of dollars. Yet the $13 billion carrier and its 5,000 crew remained untouched. Within hours, additional SM-6 missiles were being flown in for replenishment. The Lincoln never left station.

Video evidence—from satellite detections to interceptor impacts—was compiled and presented to international partners. Washington described the strike as an unprovoked attack in international waters. Regional allies watched closely. Saudi Arabia, the UAE, and Bahrain saw confirmation that ballistic missile threats could be countered by layered missile defense and rapid networked coordination.
Iran, for its part, remained publicly silent. State media avoided mention of the incident. Behind closed doors, reports suggested internal investigations into how the strike had failed so completely.

Strategically, the message was unmistakable. The Khalij Fars missile, long touted as a carrier killer, had been defeated in real combat conditions. The SM-6 interceptor and Aegis system proved capable of engaging high-speed, maneuvering ballistic targets. The integration of satellite early warning, networked destroyers, and rapid retaliatory strike aircraft demonstrated a level of coordination that left little room for doubt.
As dawn broke over the Persian Gulf, the USS Abraham Lincoln resumed normal flight operations. Jets launched. Patrols continued. Shipping lanes remained open.
Iran had wagered that speed and surprise would deliver a historic blow. Instead, eight missiles vanished in midair, and the retaliation that followed reshaped the balance of deterrence in under half an hour.

