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Four Iranian Missiles Fired Simultaneously From Three Positions at a U.S. Cruiser – The Closest…

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At precisely 0533 hours on September 19, 2025, four missiles were fired simultaneously from three coastal positions targeting the USS Cape St. George.

The Aegis system classified all four as hostile before any of them were 30 seconds into their flight.

This was not a test or a demonstration; it was a coordinated multi-battery simultaneous salvo against a single American cruiser entering the Strait of Hormuz at the beginning of morning nautical twilight.

The timing was calculated to exploit the optimal engagement window against the American formation.

The crew of the Cape St. George had a mere 88 seconds of flight time remaining on the nearest missile, with a battery of SM-2s that had never been tested against this specific simultaneous load at this specific geometry.

The USS Cape St. George, a Ticonderoga-class cruiser, was one of the most capable surface air defense platforms in the fleet at the time of the engagement.

It was the lead ship of a two-cruiser, four-destroyer surface action group conducting a scheduled westbound transit of the Strait of Hormuz.

The Cape St. George was positioned four nautical miles ahead of the main body, tasked with providing the forward air defense umbrella for the formation.

The three batteries that fired had been established over a period of 36 hours in prepared alternate positions

These were not the primary documented battery positions in the American targeting database but secondary positions that had been surveyed and prepared earlier specifically for this engagement.

The occupation had occurred during a satellite gap and during hours when commercial traffic density in the Strait created a cluttered radar environment.

This clutter complicated the pattern recognition that would have identified the vehicle movements as military repositioning.

The exploitation of commercial traffic was a refinement of the behavioral mimicry tactic documented in previous engagements, using the radar and visual clutter of legitimate commercial activity to conceal military movements.

Three battery vehicles moved to alternate positions on three separate bearings, each moving through areas of active port traffic and ground transport activity.

This produced a reconnaissance picture that an analyst examining any single vehicle’s movement would have assessed as routine commercial traffic.

Three separate movements, three separate routine assessments, and three separate analysts reviewing three separate intelligence products.

None of them were the same analyst reviewing all three simultaneously.

The aggregate pattern—three separate battery vehicles moving to prepared alternate positions in a coordinated time frame—was only visible in retrospect when all three intelligence products were overlaid after the engagement.

The three separate assessments highlighted an intelligence process gap.

The pre-transit intelligence review for high-threat Hormuz transits should include a dedicated aggregate analysis phase.

An analyst should be assigned specifically to look for coordinated movement patterns across all sectors simultaneously rather than individual sector analysts reviewing their own areas in isolation.

This aggregate analyst role was added to the Hormuz transit intelligence support requirement within three weeks of the engagement.

Returning to 0533, four missiles were launched from three positions, with 88 seconds to the nearest impact.

The Aegis system’s response to the four simultaneous threat classifications was immediate and automated to the authorization point.

Four target tracks, four intercept solutions, and four SM-2 allocations were computed in parallel.

The commanding officer gave weapons free at 0538:08, eight seconds after the launches were detected.

The first SM-2 was in the air at 0538:14.

Four SM-2s were airborne within 22 seconds of launch detection, each tracking its assigned target.

The engagement geometry was a critical factor that every pre-engagement planning discussion had tried to optimize, but the Iranian battery positioning sought to defeat this optimization

The three positions were 41 nautical miles to the north, arranged at bearing separations of 12 and 19 degrees.

The 12-degree separation between the western and central batteries put their missile approach tracks in a convergence that stressed the Aegis seeker geometry.

The same crossing angle and convergence approach vector problem had been documented in past engagements as a performance boundary.

The 19-degree separation to the eastern battery’s track was within standard performance parameters.

The allocation plan had compensated by assigning the more capable SM-6 interceptors to the convergent track missiles, while the SM-2 Block 3A was allocated to the standard geometry contacts.

The Cape St. George was the only ship in the formation with SM-6 loaded in the cells, and its pre-transit loadout had been configured specifically for the two-interceptor type distribution after prior incidents had informed loadout guidance.

The SM-6 engagements against the convergent track missiles were executed at 0538:19 and 0538:31, with both intercepts confirmed and both missiles destroyed at ranges of 21 and 17 nautical miles.

The SM-2 engagement against the eastern standard geometry missile was confirmed at 0538:41, resulting in a clean kill at 23 nautical miles.

Three for three.

However, the fourth missile, the second of the two from the central battery’s paired launch, posed a problem.

The central battery had fired two missiles with a 7-second stagger between them.

The first missile was engaged by the SM-6 at 0538:19, while the second missile had been allocated to a second SM-6.

That SM-6 had acquired the target and was running toward intercept when the CENTCOM tactical data link experienced a four-second interruption at 0538:55.

The interruption was caused by a burst of frequency jamming from an Iranian electronic warfare asset operating in the northern Gulf.

This caused the tactical picture to freeze on the Cape St. George’s secondary display for four seconds.

While the primary Aegis track continued uninterrupted, the jamming affected the confidence level assigned to the track in the automated engagement management system, which briefly flagged the track as uncertain and paused the second SM-6’s terminal guidance update cycle.

Although the SM-6’s seeker reacquired the target when the tactical data link recovered, the four-second pause had shifted the predicted intercept range from 14 nautical miles to 9 nautical miles.

This closer intercept left less time to correct any seeker error against the missile that had survived the initial SM-6 hit.

The SM-6 detonated at 9.2 nautical miles, with the proximity fuse activating and hitting the missile’s midbody.

The missile entered ballistic flight, losing guidance and thrust, and followed gravity toward the sea surface.

The warhead impacted the water 380 meters from the Cape St. George’s hull, producing a column of water visible from the main body formation four nautical miles astern.

The pressure wave reached the Cape St. George’s hull, recorded by the structural monitoring system as a low-level impact event.

There was no damage and no crew injuries, with the 380-meter distance marking the closest that the four simultaneous Iranian missiles came to the Ticonderoga-class cruiser that had been prepared, coordinated, and armed for exactly this engagement.

The commanding officer transmitted the engagement summary at 0536.

Four missiles engaged, four intercepts confirmed or degraded to safe impact, with the formation unharmed and continuing transit.

The jamming event and the four-second tactical data link interruption were the intelligence detail that the post-incident analysis invested the most effort in characterizing.

Iranian electronic warfare in the Gulf had previously been limited to emissions that degraded individual sensors, radar jamming, and communications disruption.

However, this incident marked a significant escalation, as it targeted the tactical data link architecture connecting American ships’ combat pictures during an active SM-6 engagement.

The timing of the jamming coincided with the SM-6’s terminal guidance phase, indicating that the Iranian electronic warfare operator had been monitoring the tactical data links and timed the activation to coincide with the missile’s approach.

This level of knowledge and real-time monitoring of American tactical data link traffic during an active engagement represented a significant step in Iranian signals intelligence capabilities.

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