Iran Attacks Fake U.S. Aircraft Carrier

During a wargame on July 28, Iran ran a mock attack on a fake U.S. aircraft carrier in the Persian Gulf. The Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) fired missiles at a dummy war ship near the Strait of Hormuz. The exercise – dubbed Great Prophet 14 – involved the IRGC’s air force and navy, but Iran’s conventional navy, which operates mainly in the Gulf of Oman and the Caspian Sea, did not participate.

In the military exercise, IRGC commandos rappelled from helicopters onto the vessel, which was 650 feet long – about 300 feet shorter than a real U.S. aircraft carrier. Speedboats encircled the fake carrier and fired rockets at it. IRGC naval scuba divers carried out mock operations underwater against the fake carrier. Satellite imagery showed limited damage to the replica's bow, although mock U.S. fighter jets on top were destroyed.

The Revolutionary Guards declared the offensive exercise a success. “We will not invade any country from the beginning, but we are completely aggressive in tactics and operations,” General Hossein Salami, the IRGC commander, said.

IRGC officers monitor wargame
IRGC officers monitor a war game near the Strait of Hormuz on July 28 and 29

U.S. Central Command condemned the wargame as “irresponsible and reckless,” according to Commander Rebecca Rebarich, a spokesperson for the U.S. Fifth Fleet based in Bahrain. "The U.S. Navy conducts defensive exercises with our partners promoting maritime security in support of freedom of navigation whereas Iran conducts offensive exercises, attempting to intimidate and coerce.”

The U.S. Navy has up to 22 warships with the Fifth Fleet, based in Bahrain, in the Persian Gulf. The simulated attack occurred just one week after the USS Nimitz arrived in the Gulf, on rotation. The United States responded to Iran’s wargame by putting two bases – al Udeid in Qatar and al Dhafra in Abu Dhabi – on temporary alert.

 

IRGC attack on a fake U.S. warship

Speedboats approach fake carrier
IRGC naval forces approach the mock aircraft carrier

Prophet 14 was not the first time Iran used the fake carrier—the same one—in a wargame. It was built in 2014. It can be moved by a tug boat but not on its own. Iranian news outlets claimed at the time that it was a prop for a film recounting the shootdown of Iran Air Flight 655 by the USS Vincennes. In February 2015, the IRGC fired cruise missiles at the replica during the Great Prophet 9 exercises.

IRGC commandos
Commandos land on the mock aircraft carrier

Encircled carrier
Speedboats encircle the carrier

 

 

The fake carrier, however, capsized after the exercise. Satellite photos taken on July 31 showed the mock carrier partially submerged near Bandar Abbas. The reason why the vessel sank was unclear. H. I. Sutton, a defense contributor for Forbes, speculated that either “damage sustained during the exercise” or “a mishap in towing the bulky vessel” could have caused it to sink.  

 

The damaged vessel posed a hazard to ships trying to navigate the port. The waters near Bandar Abbas are approximately 45 feet deep – shallow enough to damage ships attempting to sail over the sunken carrier.

 

Iran demonstrates other capabilities

During Great Prophet 14, Iran used anti-aircraft batteries to shoot down (its own) drones flying over Bandar Abbas.

IRGC fires anti-aircraft gun
IRGC fires anti-aircraft gun in ground mode

The IRGC also launched ballistic missiles from an underground base in the central desert at mockups of U.S. missile defense systems. State-media claimed the exercises were monitored by a military satellite that the Revolutionary Guards had launched into orbit on April 22.

Boat fires missile
An IRGC boat fires a missile

Ballistic missile from underground silo
IRGC fires a ballistic missile from an underground silo

Truck fires missile
A truck fires missiles from shore

 

Social media clash

Iran and the United States bashed each other on social media after the exercise was completed.

Iranian media depicted the carrier as casket-shaped with the hashtag “reciprocal strike.” The hashtag referred to Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei’s pledge to retaliate for the assassination of Qassem Soleimani.

 

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

A post shared by US Navy (@usnavy) on

The U.S. Navy posted a response on Instagram mocking Iran for building ships that could easily be targeted and destroyed.

 

Andrew Hanna, a research assistant at the United States Institute of Peace, assembled this report. 

Photo credits: All photos via Tasnim News Agency (CC by 4.0)

Some of the information in this article was originally published on July 29, 2020.