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Four hundred sailors were on deck when it happened. Iranian drones, costing $20,000 each, just penetrated the defensive perimeter of the USS Gerald R. Ford — a $13 billion aircraft carrier, the most expensive warship ever built. The most advanced radar systems in the U.S. Navy. The most sophisticated intercept missiles. Three escort destroyers. A cruiser. A nuclear submarine. None of it stopped what happened 48 hours ago in the Red Sea. The U.S. Navy didn't announce this publicly. The admission came buried in an operational incident report filed with CENTCOM: "Multiple unmanned aerial systems achieved proximity to CVN-78 before being neutralized." Proximity. That's the word they used. Not intercepted at distance. Not destroyed during approach. Proximity means the drones got close enough that if they'd been carrying warheads instead of cameras, 400 American sailors wouldn't have walked away. This is not a tactical failure. This is proof that carrier defensive systems have a blind spot that cannot be fixed with current technology. And every adversarial navy in the world just watched Iran exploit it with drones that cost less than a luxury car. WHAT HAPPENED: Iranian drones flew 15 meters above water at 80 knots Mimicked fishing vessels on radar to avoid early detection Penetrated $27 billion carrier strike group defensive umbrella Reached visual range of flight deck where 400 sailors were working U.S. Navy forced to reposition carrier 150 miles from coast New rules of engagement: engage ALL drones within 50 miles ⚠️ DISCLAIMER: This analysis is based on publicly available operational reports, naval specifications, and strategic assessment. Information derived from open-source intelligence and military doctrine documentation. Content for educational purposes.