Washington: Iran's ability to threaten its neighbors and U.S. interests has been dramatically reduced by U.S. bombings, and Tehran's defense industry has been set back by ‌90%, a ⁠senior ⁠U.S. admiral said on Thursday. Admiral Brad Cooper, head of U.S. Central Command, sought to underscore the tactical successes of the military campaign against Iran that he oversaw and said the war had dramatically reduced the danger posed by that country ⁠to the ‌broader Middle East.Cooper declined to ​directly address ​reports by Reuters and other news organizations ⁠that Iran, which stockpiled arms in underground ​facilities, had retained significant missile and drone ​capabilities. Those reports cited U.S. intelligence sources."Iran has a significantly degraded threat, and they no longer threaten regional partners, or the United States, in ways that they were able to do ‌before, across every domain," Cooper told a U.S. Senate committee."They've been significantly degraded." Cooper ​also ​said Iran was ⁠no longer able to transfer arms and other resources to its main allies in the region: Hezbollah ​in Lebanon, the Houthis in Yemen and Hamas in the Palestinian enclave of Gaza."Those transfer paths and methods have been cut off," he said.