Ugh. Again, not true.
Is Iran running out of missiles or other weapons that could hit ships in the strait of hormuz?
Short answer:
No —
Iran is not close to running out of missiles or weapons yet. Most intelligence estimates say they still have
large stockpiles and cheaper weapons (especially drones) that could keep attacks going for quite a while.
1. Iran still has a very large missile arsenal
Military analysts estimate Iran has
one of the largest missile forces in the Middle East.
- Estimates range from 1,500–2,000 ballistic missiles in total. (Fox News)
- Some reports put the broader arsenal (including various missile types) above 3,000 missiles. (EURASIAN TIMES)
- Many of these can reach up to ~2,000 km (1,200 miles). (AOL)
They also have
anti-ship missiles specifically designed to hit vessels, including systems like the
Khalij Fars anti-ship ballistic missile with a ~300 km range and large warhead. (
IDN Financials)
So purely in terms of inventory,
they still have plenty left.
2. The bigger threat in the Strait may actually be drones and mines
Iran doesn’t rely only on missiles in the Strait of Hormuz. Their strategy is
asymmetric warfare — lots of different cheaper weapons used together.
Common tools Iran uses there:
- Attack drones (kamikaze drones)
- Anti-ship cruise missiles from shore
- Naval mines
- Fast boats with rockets
- Small submarines
Iran built these systems specifically to overwhelm ships in the narrow waterway. (
U.S. Department of War)
And drones are particularly concerning because they’re
cheap and easy to mass-produce.
3. Experts say Iran could keep this up for months
Some defense analysts think Iran could
disrupt shipping in the Strait of Hormuz for months, especially using drones and mines rather than expensive missiles. (
Reuters)
Recent reporting also says the conflict has
not yet significantly depleted Iran’s missile or drone stockpiles. (
Hindustan Times)
Bottom line:
- Iran is not running out of missiles yet.
- They still have thousands of missiles plus large numbers of drones and mines.
- Even if missiles run low, cheaper drone and mine attacks could continue for months.
If you want, I can also explain
why the Strait of Hormuz is actually a perfect place for Iran to attack ships (geography makes it very hard to defend) — it’s a big reason the situation there is so dangerous right now.