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US Strikes Focus on Tactical Iranian Assets Rather Than Strategic Infrastructure

Mario Nawfal Interviews · BREAKING: IRAN BOMBS SAUDI ARABIA AND GULF w/ Fmr U.S. Intel Stefano Ritondale & Azi · July 13, 2026
US Strikes Focus on Tactical Iranian Assets Rather Than Strategic Infrastructure
Mario Nawfal Interviews
Mario Nawfal Interviews
BREAKING: IRAN BOMBS SAUDI ARABIA AND GULF w/ Fmr U.S. Intel Stefano Ritondale & Azi
"Everything that we've seen right now, okay, everything we're seeing right now that the United States is doing is tactical. These are tactical-level strikes to have tactical-level impacts. When I say tactical, it's at— it's that— it's like at the lowest level within the Iranian military, like the capabilities that Iran has to do a certain strike."
US military operations are targeting mobile Iranian military assets like missile launchers and radars rather than fixed strategic infrastructure, representing a departure from the 40-day war strategy. The focus is on degrading Iran's ability to control the Strait of Hormuz through repeated strikes on tactical systems, though analysts question whether this approach can achieve strategic objectives without ground operations.

About this episode

Host Mario conducted emergency late-night coverage with military analysts Stefano and Aziz following Iran's expanded retaliatory strikes against US military assets across the Gulf region and simultaneous American bombing campaigns inside Iran. The most significant development was Iran's first strike against Saudi Arabia in the current escalation cycle, hitting US installations while conspicuously avoiding the UAE despite its heavy involvement in previous military operations against Iran. Analysts debated whether UAE immunity indicates behind-the-scenes negotiations, with Mario citing reports of UAE-Iran diplomatic visits and potential financial concessions. The discussion revealed that US strikes are focusing on tactical Iranian military assets like mobile missile launchers, radars, and small boats rather than strategic infrastructure, representing a shift from the 40-day war strategy. Iran has deliberately limited its retaliation to US military targets across Kuwait, Bahrain, Jordan, and Oman, avoiding all energy and civilian infrastructure. Stefano, drawing on military experience, explained that current US operations aim to degrade Iran's ability to control the Strait of Hormuz through sustained attrition of tactical systems, though Aziz questioned whether airstrikes alone can achieve strategic objectives given Iran's 40 years of preparation. The analysts agreed both sides appear to be conducting calibrated strikes designed to increase costs while avoiding full war resumption, with Iran particularly keen to prevent Israeli involvement. Key targets included Bandar Abbas naval facilities, the Khuzestan region near Iraq used for strikes against Kuwait, and Iranian Revolutionary Guard assets. The episode concluded with all participants acknowledging the region remains on the precipice of wider conflict despite both sides' apparent efforts to maintain limited engagement rules.

Key takeaways

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