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The invincibility myth has ended. Today, March 11, 2026, we analyze the "A2/AD Validation"—the moment four Iranian missiles changed U.S. naval doctrine forever. On March 1, just hours after the start of Operation Epic Fury, the IRGC claimed to have launched four ballistic missiles at the USS Abraham Lincoln. While CENTCOM officially confirmed the carrier was "not hit" and remains fully operational, the tactical fallout tells a different story. We dive into the "Distance Mandate." Following the near-miss and the reported deployment of Chinese-made CM-302 supersonic missiles, the U.S. Navy has effectively validated Iran’s Anti-Access/Area Denial (A2/AD) strategy by adopting a permanent 1,000 km standoff distance. We analyze the "Stranglehold Paradox": if a carrier must stay 600 miles away to be safe, its short-range fighters are useless without a massive, vulnerable fleet of tankers. As Secretary of War Pete Hegseth pivots to "Long-Range Retribution," we ask: Did Iran’s $500,000 missiles just "soft-kill" the $13 billion supercarrier by making the Persian Gulf too expensive to enter? Key Highlights: The New Naval Reality The March 1 Salvo: A technical look at the four missiles launched from Iran’s "Missile Cities" and why the Navy's Aegis system was forced into "Maximum Alert" for the first time in history. Supersonic "Sea-Skimmers": How the threat of the CM-302—capable of Mach 3 at altitudes of just 5 meters—has turned the Strait of Hormuz into a "No-Go Zone" for high-value assets. The "Tanker Bridge" Crisis: Why the 1,000 km standoff has made the MQ-25 Stingray and the KC-46 the most critical (and overworked) assets in Operation Epic Fury. Doctrine of "Standoff Retribution": How the Navy is shifting from carrier-based airpower to Submarine-launched Tomahawks and B-21 Raiders to strike inland targets. The "Golden Hour" Loophole: Why the time it takes for a jet to fly 1,000 km from a carrier is giving Iranian mobile launchers enough time to relocate after firing. LIKE AND SUBSCRIBE! We track the evolution of modern warfare. If you want to see our technical deep-dive into the "Aegis Overload" that happened during the March 1 attack, hit that LIKE button and SUBSCRIBE now! Disclaimer This video is for educational and informational purposes. Data is based on March 2026 reports from Naval Today, War.gov, and verified CENTCOM briefings. "A2/AD Validation" refers to the strategic adoption of standoff distances in response to advanced missile threats.