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BREAKING:Iranian Fast Attack Craft Surrounded a US Fleet at Dawn – What Happened 12 Minutes Later Shocked… – HTT
Iranian Fast Attack Craft Surrounded a US Fleet at Dawn — What Happened 12 Minutes Later Shocked…
Dawn in the Persian Gulf lasts approximately 23 minutes, from the first visible edge of the sun to full daylight.
Smaller than the destroyers at 3,500 tons and faster at 47 knots, the Detroit was lightly armed with a single 57 mm gun, a CRAM point defense missile system, and .50 caliber machine guns.
Designed for flexibility rather than sustained combat, the formation was transiting eastbound through the northern Gulf, heading toward the Strait of Hormuz for a scheduled passage into the Gulf of Oman.
The route passed 30 nautical miles south of Iran’s coast, standard for military transits.
At 0511 hours, 17 minutes before sunrise, the Anzio’s SPY-1B radar maintained a routine surface picture, identifying 32 contacts within 30 nautical miles.
These included commercial traffic such as tankers, container ships, bulk carriers, and fishing clusters near the Qatari coast, along with two contacts classified as Iranian Navy patrol vessels, Alvand-class frigates operating 25 nautical miles to the northeast, well within Iranian waters—no threats detected.
At 0514, the E-2D Hawkeye, orbiting at 25,000 feet, detected an anomaly in the radar picture.
Several contacts previously classified as stationary, resembling anchored fishing boats or moored vessels, began to move.
Not all at once, but in sequence—first two, then three more, then four, then six.
Individual contacts scattered across a 20-meter radius around the formation, all beginning to move within a 90-second window.
The Hawkeye’s operator, a young lieutenant on her second deployment, recognized the pattern from a training scenario she had studied six months earlier.
Contacts that remain still and then activate simultaneously from distributed positions indicated prepositioned assets executing a coordinated launch.
She flagged it immediately, and the data reached the Anzio’s Combat Information Center (CIC) at 0515.
At 0516, the picture crystallized: 20 contacts, all accelerating, all converging on the formation’s projected position.
From the north, south, east, and west, a complete compass encirclement was forming.
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The boats had been prepositioned during the night, engines off, drifting on the current or anchored to buoys, methods that produced radar returns indistinguishable from normal Gulf debris and small stationary vessels.
They had waited through the entire night—patient, silent, invisible.
Then, at the precise moment of nautical twilight, when visual identification is hardest and sensor transitions create micro gaps in coverage, they all moved at once.
According to post-incident analysis, the timing was not coincidental; it was calculated to the minute.
The IRGCN had studied the sensor transition patterns of U.S. warships during dawn operations and identified a 4 to 6 minute window when radar optimization shifts from night mode to day mode.
Thermal imaging becomes less effective as air temperatures rise, and visual identification is limited by diffused light.
They hit that window perfectly.
General quarters were called across all four ships at 0517, with over 1,400 sailors sprinting to battle stations.
The formation commander, a captain aboard the Anzio, faced 20 contacts inbound from every direction.
His four ships were configured for transit, not defense.
A loose column with the LCS trailing, he needed to reconfigure for all-around engagement.
At 0518, he issued the order to execute a pre-planned defensive formation shift, code-named Hedgehog.
The three larger warships would form a triangle, with the cruiser at the apex and the destroyers at the base, creating overlapping weapons arcs that covered 360 degrees.
The Detroit, the LCS, would accelerate to maximum speed and serve as a fast response interceptor against any boat that penetrated the outer defense.
