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Did an Iranian “Ghost Drone” Blind the U.S. 5th Fleet? Here’s What’s Actually Known There are confirmed reports of Iranian drone strikes damaging U.S. radar and communications systems in the Gulf, but the viral claim that a single “ghost drone” has made the U.S. Navy “completely blind” is an exaggeration. Here’s the verified situation based on recent reporting and satellite imagery. 1️⃣ Drone Strike on the U.S. Fifth Fleet Base At the headquarters of the United States Fifth Fleet in Manama, Bahrain, satellite imagery confirmed damage from Iranian drone strikes. Fires were visible inside the base perimeter Two radomes or satellite communication terminals were destroyed Part of a warehouse complex was damaged Analysts say at least one strike involved a Shahed-type attack drone, a relatively cheap one-way drone often costing tens of thousands of dollars. 2️⃣ Additional Radar Systems Hit Across the Region Separate reports suggest Iranian strikes also targeted U.S. early-warning radars tied to missile defense networks in several locations. Some of the systems reportedly damaged include: AN/FPS-132 early-warning radar in Qatar Radar components linked to THAAD missile-defense systems in multiple Gulf sites Radar or communications equipment at bases in Kuwait and Saudi Arabia These radars are crucial because they provide long-range tracking of missiles and drones. 3️⃣ Why Radar Is Iran’s Real Target Military analysts say Iran is trying to “blind” the missile-defense network, not necessarily destroy bases themselves. The strategy works like this: First wave: drones and missiles target radar and sensors Second wave: follow-up attacks exploit gaps in detection Third wave: larger missile strikes or swarm drones penetrate defenses Even partial radar loss can reduce reaction time for missile intercepts. 4️⃣ But the U.S. Is Not “Blind” Even if several radar sites are damaged, the U.S. still has a multi-layered detection network, including: Airborne radar planes such as the Boeing E‑3 Sentry AWACS Ship-based radar systems on United States Navy destroyers Space-based missile warning satellites Additional ground radar systems across the region So losing a few radar installations reduces coverage but does not eliminate it. 5️⃣ The Real Concern: Cost Imbalance The strikes highlight a growing military problem. Example: A Shahed-type drone: ~$30k–$50k A THAAD radar: up to $800 million A large early-warning radar: over $1 billion This creates what analysts call a “cost asymmetry” — cheap drones threatening extremely expensive defense infrastructure.