Tuesday, April 28, 2026
12.2 C
New York

IRGC Deploys Twin Missile Launch Systems for First Time as Iran Introduces New Offensive Capability Under Fire

Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps has deployed twin missile launch systems for the first time in the conflict, according to PressTV. The deployment represents a significant escalation in Iran’s retaliatory capability — doubling the rate of fire from each launcher position and complicating the US-Israeli missile defense calculus.

The twin-launch systems allow two missiles to be fired simultaneously from a single mobile platform, reducing the time between salvos and increasing the saturation load on interceptor systems such as Israel’s Arrow and the US THAAD batteries deployed in the region. Missile defense operates on a ratio — the number of interceptors required per incoming threat. Doubling the launch rate from each position shifts that ratio in Iran’s favor.

The timing of the deployment is deliberate. It comes as the US and Israel are conducting their most intensive strikes yet against Iranian infrastructure — hitting railways, bridges, highways, and military installations across the country simultaneously. The IRGC is signaling that despite six weeks of sustained bombardment, Iran retains the capacity not only to retaliate but to introduce new offensive systems into the fight.

Related: NewsRescue — Israel Strikes Railways, Bridges, Highways Across Entire Iran

This directly contradicts the White House claim of 90 percent degradation of Iran’s launch capability. US intelligence agencies have assessed the actual figure closer to 50 percent. The deployment of previously unseen twin-launch systems suggests Iran was holding back capability in reserve — a standard military doctrine of deception that involves absorbing initial strikes while preserving advanced systems for later phases of the conflict.

The IRGC’s strategy appears to be one of sustained attrition rather than decisive engagement. Iran cannot match American and Israeli firepower in a direct exchange. But it does not need to. It needs to demonstrate that the cost of continuing the war exceeds what the attackers are willing to pay — in aircraft lost, in oil disrupted, in regional allies drawn into the conflict, in global economic damage, and in the political cost of a war without end.

Related: NewsRescue — Pentagon Intelligence Says Only Half of Iran’s Weapons Destroyed

The twin-launch deployment is also a message to the countries hosting US forces in the region. Kuwait has already suffered a drone strike on an oil refinery and 15 injured American troops. Saudi Arabia’s oil infrastructure has been hit. Every new Iranian capability introduced into the conflict expands the threat envelope for regional states that allowed their territory to be used as a staging ground for attacks on Iran.

Six weeks into this war, Iran is deploying new weapons systems rather than running out of them. The implications for the duration and trajectory of this conflict are significant — and they are not the implications that Washington has been selling to the American public.

Most Popular

20 Years After Sadam, Iraq’s Oil Money Still Flows Through US Fed

Twenty-three years after the invasion of Iraq, the country's oil revenues still pass through an account at the Federal Reserve Bank of New York — and Washington is now extending the same model to Venezuela.

Russian Forces Kill 1000, Defending Mali From ‘Western, Ukrainian’ Terrorists Coup Attempt [VIDEOS]

Russia's Africa Corps says it killed roughly 1,000 fighters from JNIM and the Azawad Liberation Front in coordinated operations across Bamako, Kati, Gao, Kidal and Sevare on April 26.

Cole Tomas Allen – What We Know

A 31-year-old Caltech graduate, part-time tutor and indie game developer from Torrance, California — armed with a shotgun, a handgun and multiple knives — charged the Washington Hilton lobby on Saturday night.

Trump Rushed From Press Dinner as Shots Ring Out

A 31-year-old Californian charged 50 yards toward the Washington Hilton ballroom on Saturday night – the third time in three years a bullet has been aimed at Donald Trump.

Hegseth Fires Navy Secretary – Pentagon Purge Deepens

"He didn't understand he wasn't the boss" — the unnamed source's blunt verdict on John Phelan captures the new operating principle inside Donald Trump's Pentagon.

Recent

20 Years After Sadam, Iraq’s Oil Money Still Flows Through US Fed

Twenty-three years after the invasion of Iraq, the country's oil revenues still pass through an account at the Federal Reserve Bank of New York — and Washington is now extending the same model to Venezuela.

Russian Forces Kill 1000, Defending Mali From ‘Western, Ukrainian’ Terrorists Coup Attempt [VIDEOS]

Russia's Africa Corps says it killed roughly 1,000 fighters from JNIM and the Azawad Liberation Front in coordinated operations across Bamako, Kati, Gao, Kidal and Sevare on April 26.

Cole Tomas Allen – What We Know

A 31-year-old Caltech graduate, part-time tutor and indie game developer from Torrance, California — armed with a shotgun, a handgun and multiple knives — charged the Washington Hilton lobby on Saturday night.

Trump Rushed From Press Dinner as Shots Ring Out

A 31-year-old Californian charged 50 yards toward the Washington Hilton ballroom on Saturday night – the third time in three years a bullet has been aimed at Donald Trump.

Hegseth Fires Navy Secretary – Pentagon Purge Deepens

"He didn't understand he wasn't the boss" — the unnamed source's blunt verdict on John Phelan captures the new operating principle inside Donald Trump's Pentagon.

Israel Desperate to Destroy Iran Energy, Economic infrastructure, Send It to ‘Stone Age’, if Trump Submits

Israeli Defence Minister Israel Katz says Tel Aviv is "awaiting a green light from the United States" to finish what June's bombing campaign began.

Cybercab Production Begins –Elon Announces Tesla’s Robotaxi

Whatever one's politics on Musk, the design is hard to argue with – flush surfaces, butterfly doors, a silhouette more like consumer electronics than a car.

Iran’s Lego Music Machine Drags Sudan’s ‘Forgotten War’ Into the Global Spotlight

It took an Iranian propaganda outfit – not CNN, not the BBC, not the State Department – to force Sudan's 150,000 dead back into the world's view.
spot_img

Related Articles

Subscribe
Notify of
guest
0 Comments
Oldest
Newest Most Voted
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments

Popular Categories

spot_img
0
Would love your thoughts, please comment.x
()
x