Intelligence Estimates: Half of Enemy Radar Systems in the Region Destroyed
WANA (Mar 10) – Intelligence assessments indicate that roughly 50 percent of Iran’s enemies’ radar capabilities in the region have been destroyed amid intensified military operations.
Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) and other armed forces units have reportedly stepped up attacks on U.S. military infrastructure and bases across the region, as well as military targets inside Israeli-held territories.
Published images suggest that many missiles and loitering drones successfully struck their intended targets, allegedly due to significant weaknesses in U.S. and Israeli air defense systems.
According to the report, during the early days of the conflict, the IRGC focused on targeting enemy radar systems across the region using precision-guided missiles.
Multiple operations were conducted with this objective, and satellite imagery is said to show projectiles successfully hitting radar installations and early-warning systems.
Based on these intelligence estimates, around 50 percent of enemy radar capacity has been destroyed, while the remaining systems are reportedly experiencing disruptions and reduced effectiveness. The situation has allegedly prompted the United States to transfer additional air defense equipment from East Asia to the region.
The report also claims that opposing forces are facing logistical challenges in sustaining the conflict, having already used about 75 percent of their munitions. With all U.S. bases in the region reportedly under threat, new shipments of ammunition have not yet been successfully delivered to the area.

Iranian Ballistic Missile Reportedly Strikes Key U.S. Early-Warning Radar in Qatar
WANA (Mar 04) – New satellite imagery has raised a striking claim: an Iranian ballistic missile has reportedly struck the AN/FPS-132 phased-array radar stationed at Al Udeid Air Base in Qatar—one of the United States’ most critical early-warning sensors in the region. The assessment was published by geopolitical analyst Shanaka Anslem Perera, who wrote […]





