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U.S. Forces in the Middle East: Separating Fact from Iranian Propaganda

There has been no reduction of U.S. forces in the Iran theater. Photo courtesy of the U.S. Air Education and Training Command.

Pro-Iran propaganda on social media claims that most U.S. bases in the Middle East have been destroyed and are uninhabitable, and that the United States has abandoned all of its regional bases. No part of this is true.

Prior to the February 28 strikes on Iran, the Pentagon reduced personnel at several bases located within range of Iranian short-range missiles. The U.S. Fleet Headquarters in Bahrain was drawn down to fewer than 100 mission-critical personnel, and all ships left port. Both measures had been taken previously in 2025 ahead of earlier strikes on Iranian nuclear sites.

This tactical repositioning, a deliberate pre-strike defensive measure and part of a broader deception operation, is the kernel of truth on which Iran’s propaganda is built.

What the empty port actually represented was standard naval doctrine, not retreat. Dispersing ships is a common safety technique employed by navies around the world in times of heightened threat. A warship sitting at a pier is stationary, unable to maneuver or effectively use its own defensive systems.

Moving U.S. warships out of port in Bahrain was a prudent security measure; the Gulf state is well within range of Iranian missiles and long-range kamikaze drones, and U.S. military facilities in Manama did subsequently come under attack.

The U.S. military’s own strikes on Iranian naval vessels in port underscored the vulnerability of ships sitting pierside. Once at sea, the ships dispersed across the Arabian Sea and Indian Ocean, where they remained active, maneuverable, and available for operations. Military analysts describe this “scattering” as a classic protective protocol designed to deny an enemy a stationary target. By moving into open water, ships become significantly harder to hit with the ballistic missiles and drone swarms that constitute Iran’s primary retaliatory capability. The port was empty. The fleet was not.

Two U.S. Navy Littoral Combat Ships, USS Tulsa and USS Santa Barbara, equipped for mine-clearing operations, were moved from the Middle East to Malaysia and then on to Singapore, where the Navy confirmed they were conducting scheduled maintenance. The U.S. and Singapore have an agreement that allows littoral combat ships to operate from Singapore as a logistics and maintenance hub.

After maintenance is complete, the vessels will likely return to the Middle East. In the meantime, while the threat of naval mines in the Strait of Hormuz remains a possibility, the more immediate danger to ships is from drones, reducing the urgency of redeploying the two mine-countermeasure ships.

As for U.S. bases, Iranian retaliatory strikes have caused infrastructure damage at several locations. Satellite imagery confirmed damage at Al Dhafra Air Base in the UAE, including to a compound, satellite systems, and radar equipment, though the base remains operational. The U.S. naval base in Bahrain sustained more significant damage, with strikes hitting warehouses and satellite dishes, prompting the departure of military families. Most Iranian attacks across the region were intercepted by host-nation air defenses.

The operational picture is one of expansion, not withdrawal. Prior to the latest reinforcements, 50,000 U.S. troops were already deployed across the Middle East. Kuwait hosts the largest concentration, approximately 13,500 personnel at Ali Al-Salem Air Base and Camps Arifjan and Buehring. Al Udeid Air Base in Qatar, the forward headquarters for U.S. Air Forces Central Command, houses around 10,000 service members. Bahrain hosts more than 8,300 personnel, including U.S. Naval Forces Central Command.

The Trump administration has since ordered approximately 2,000 soldiers from the 82nd Airborne Division to deploy to the region, on top of two Marine Expeditionary Units with their Amphibious Ready Groups, the 11th MEU and the 31st MEU, together bringing roughly 9,000 Marines and sailors to the theater.

The Iranian propaganda narrative conflates three distinct and unrelated developments: the pre-strike personnel drawdown, which was a deliberate deception tactic; Iranian missile damage to base infrastructure, which was real but largely intercepted; and the ongoing U.S. drawdown from Syria and Iraq, which predates the war. None of these constitutes abandonment.

As of late March, the U.S. has struck approximately 9,000 targets inside Iran since operations began on February 28 and is actively building combat power in the theater.

Thirteen U.S. service members have been killed in Operation Epic Fury. Six died in an Iranian drone strike on Port Shuaiba, Kuwait, on March 1: Maj. Jeffrey O’Brien, Chief Warrant Officer 3 Robert Marzan, Capt. Cody Khork, Sgt. 1st Class Nicole Amor, Sgt. 1st Class Noah Tietjens, and Sgt. Declan Coady.

Sgt. Benjamin Pennington was wounded during an Iranian attack on Prince Sultan Air Base in Saudi Arabia on March 1 and died of those wounds on March 8.

Six more were killed when a KC-135 aerial refueling aircraft crashed over western Iraq on March 12. The full crew was Maj. John A. Klinner, 33; Capt. Ariana G. Savino, 31; Tech. Sgt. Ashley B. Pruitt, 34; Capt. Seth R. Koval, 38; Capt. Curtis J. Angst, 30; and Tech. Sgt. Tyler H. Simmons, 28.

As of March 24, 290 service members have been wounded. Of those, 255, approximately 88 percent, have returned to duty, with 10 remaining seriously wounded.

Five U.S. Air Force refueling tankers were struck and damaged on the ground during an Iranian attack on Prince Sultan Air Base in Saudi Arabia. The aircraft were not destroyed and are currently undergoing repairs.

Within the same 24-hour period, two additional KC-135s were involved in a mid-air collision, resulting in one aircraft being lost and the other damaged.

No U.S. warships have been confirmed sunk or put out of action by Iranian strikes, though infrastructure damage, including radar systems and satellite dishes, has been reported at multiple installations.

USS Gerald R. Ford arrived at Souda Bay, Greece on March 23 for maintenance and repairs following a March 12 fire in the aft laundry room, damage unrelated to combat. The Navy stated the carrier remains fully mission capable and that the port call is for assessment, repairs, and resupply.

The Ford has been deployed for approximately nine months, well beyond the typical seven-month deployment cycle, first in the Caribbean and then in the Middle East. With the Ford in Greece, USS Abraham Lincoln, operating in the Arabian Sea, is the only carrier actively in the war theater. USS George Washington remains in Yokosuka, Japan, completing in-port maintenance.

The post U.S. Forces in the Middle East: Separating Fact from Iranian Propaganda appeared first on The Gateway Pundit.

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