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The era of the "uncontested" surface carrier may be over. Today, March 7, 2026, we expose the strategic shift that the Pentagon is calling Operation Silent Fleet. Following the first American combat casualties of the 2026 Iran War—six service members killed in an Iranian drone strike in Kuwait—the U.S. Navy has made a historic decision to pull its supercarriers back from the narrow "Kill Zones" of the Persian Gulf. Taking their place at the front line: the Silent Fleet. Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth recently boasted of a "Quiet Death" delivered by an unnamed U.S. fast-attack submarine, which used a single Mark 48 torpedo to sink an Iranian frigate in the Indian Ocean—the first torpedo kill by the U.S. Navy since WWII. This move signals a massive pivot. With Iran’s "Squirter" missiles and Chinese WZ-8 "Dark-Star" drones making surface ships vulnerable to saturation attacks, the U.S. is now utilizing its massive lead in subsurface technology to control the Strait of Hormuz. We analyze why the USS Abraham Lincoln is now launching strikes from the safer, open waters of the Arabian Sea while nuclear-powered submarines carry out the "surgical work" of hunting Iranian assets within the Gulf itself. Is this a strategic retreat, or is the U.S. simply evolving to a war where visibility equals death? Key Highlights of Operation Silent Fleet The "Quiet Death" Doctrine: How U.S. submarines achieved the first torpedo kill since 1945, proving that subsurface stealth is now the ultimate defensive and offensive tool. The Squirter Threat: Why the "Squirter" missile—a low-altitude projectile that bypasses Aegis radar—has made the Persian Gulf too high-risk for $13 billion carriers. Submarine Dominance: Why nuclear-powered attack submarines are the only assets capable of remaining "invisible" to China's YLC-8B anti-stealth radars currently used by Iran. The Stand-off Strategy: How the USS Gerald R. Ford and USS Abraham Lincoln are transitioning to "Mobile Airbases" in the Mediterranean and Arabian Sea, relying on long-range refueling to reach Iran. Logistics of Silence: The U.S. Navy's transition to a fleet that "doesn't broadcast," using laser-based communications (LiFi) between subs to coordinate strikes without radio emissions. LIKE AND SUBSCRIBE LIKE AND SUBSCRIBE! We track the invisible technology that wins modern wars. If you want to see the leaked sonar footage of the first torpedo strike, hit that LIKE button and SUBSCRIBE now! Disclaimer This video is for educational and informational purposes. Tactical data is based on official briefings from Secretary Pete Hegseth, Naval News reports, and verified 5th Fleet tracking as of March 7, 2026. Submarine identities remain classified.