Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps announced on July 13 that its naval forces launched missile and drone strikes targeting two radar systems in Oman, a long-range airborne FPS radar and a ship-detection radar, while simultaneously hitting US military facilities in Bahrain’s strategic Juffair area. The IRGC framed the operations as direct retaliation for US air strikes on Iranian territory conducted around July 12.

The IRGC also claimed strikes on US-linked infrastructure in Kuwait, Jordan’s Prince Hassan Air Base, and Qatar, essentially drawing a line across the entire Persian Gulf map.

What we know, and what we don’t

As of July 17, no independent confirmation of the radar system destruction has emerged. Satellite imagery has hinted at potential impact sites, but concrete proof of damage remains elusive.

The IRGC has warned of additional strikes should US operations continue. The context matters here. US-Iran tensions have been escalating throughout July 2026, with a series of reciprocal military strikes creating the most volatile period in the Persian Gulf since the 2019 tanker attacks. Those incidents, which involved attacks on commercial vessels near the Strait of Hormuz, sent oil prices surging and put global shipping on high alert.