Iran’s Fattah‑2 strikes: Seven Military Officers Killed in One Strike
By Aqdas Hayat
Summary
Topics Covered
- Hypersonic Fatter 2 Defeats Arrow Defenses
- Fatter 2 Glides Unpredictably Beyond Arrow Design
- Raphael VP Admits Years to Counter Fatter 2
- Losing Seven Officers Fractures Command Continuity
- Decapitation Strikes Trigger Iranian Escalation
Full Transcript
Good day. Today is Sunday, the 22nd of March 2026.
What I'm going to discuss today cuts to the very heart of what this conflict is doing to Israel's military command
structure, and I think it deserves the most careful and precise analysis I can
offer. Right, day 22 and I want to begin
offer. Right, day 22 and I want to begin today with a fortified command center.
Not just any command center. A hardened,
purpose-built, deeply protected military facility constructed to the highest specifications
of modern blast resistance and structural reinforcement, designed specifically to survive the kinds of missile attacks that Israel's military
planners have been anticipating and preparing against for decades.
multiple layers of reinforced concrete, hardened communications infrastructure.
The facility was not a field headquarters improvised in the heat of operations. It was a permanent
operations. It was a permanent installation built and maintained at considerable expense, representing the
Israeli military's best architectural answer to the question of how you protect the people who make the decisions that determine the outcome of
battles.
And on the 18th of March 2026, the Fata 2 hypersonic glide vehicle
arrived at that facility.
Iran reportedly used its new hypersonic gliding missile, the Fatter 2, against a fortified Israel Defense Forces Command
Center, killing seven senior officers and numerous others.
Seven senior officers in a single strike from a single missile at a hardened command facility
and the 10 arrow interceptors that were fired to stop it all failed.
Now, I want to be precise about what happened and why because I think the detail matters enormously, and I do not
want to wave at this and simply say hypersonic missile and move on. The
Fatar 2 was first reported used in the current conflict on March 1 with footage from Israel indicating that at least
three successful Fat 2 strikes have been launched. three confirmed successful
launched. three confirmed successful strikes against targets in Israel with 10
interceptors fired in the engagement that killed seven officers. All 10
failing to achieve a kill. That is not a near miss. That is a complete and
near miss. That is a complete and documented failure of the layered Israeli defense system against this
specific weapon.
And the use of the Fetat 2 to strike very high value Israeli command infrastructure not only demonstrates the high levels of
precision achieved which is particularly difficult for such a system operating at hypersonic speed. But it tells you
hypersonic speed. But it tells you something rather important about the quality of the targeting data Iran is
feeding into the guidance system. This
was not a general area strike. This was
a precision strike on a specific hardened facility delivered at MAC 15, arriving before the full warning cycle could complete and penetrating
reinforced concrete that was designed to withstand conventional ballistic missile impacts. Although Iran in June 2025
impacts. Although Iran in June 2025 reported the use of the older baseline Fatar ballistic missile against Israeli
targets, which local sources referred to as a hypersonic missile. This missile
used an advanced maneuvering re-entry vehicle rather than a genuine hypersonic glide vehicle. The Fetar 2, by contrast,
glide vehicle. The Fetar 2, by contrast, was first reported used in the current conflict after the US and Israel
launched attacks on Iran on February 28th and is the first and only Iranian missile type known to integrate a
hypersonic glide vehicle. I want to pause on that distinction because I think it is important and has been somewhat blurred in some of the
coverage. The original Fatter missile
coverage. The original Fatter missile used in June 2025 was impressive, but it was not technically speaking a true
hypersonic glide vehicle. It used a maneuvering re-entry vehicle, which is a warhead that can alter its trajectory
during terminal descent, but which follows a broadly conventional ballistic flight path for most of its journey. The
Fatter 2 is categorically different. It
separates from its booster at altitude and then glides unpowered through the upper atmosphere at hypersonic speed,
maneuvering in both course and pitch, covering lateral distances of several thousand kilometers above the Armstrong line, the altitude at which the
atmosphere is too thin for conventional aircraft to function. It is in the technical definition a genuine
hypersonic glide vehicle comparable in design principle to Russia's ornik system. The missile's trajectory and
system. The missile's trajectory and speed resemble Russia's archnik used in Ukraine supporting Iran's claims of
hypersonic attacks on Israel. And the
reason this matters for the defense problem is that the Arrow system, Israel's primary anti-bballistic missile defense, was designed around the
characteristics of conventional ballistic missiles. It works by
ballistic missiles. It works by detecting a missile in the boost phase, calculating the Keplarian trajectory it
will follow through space and sending an interceptor to meet it at a calculated point above the atmosphere. The physics
are elegant and the system is genuinely impressive against the threats it was designed for. The Fetar 2 is not the
designed for. The Fetar 2 is not the threat it was designed for. It does not follow a predictable Keplerian arc. It
glides. It maneuvers. Hypersonic glide
vehicles can maneuver in both course and pitch, carrying out lateral maneuvers several thousand kilometers above the
Armstrong limit, which combined with their extreme speeds makes them nearly impossible for existing air defense systems to intercept.
And because it maneuvers, the intercept point that the arrow battery calculates from the early flight data is no longer
where the warhead will actually be when the interceptor arrives. The interceptor
goes to the wrong place. The warhead
goes to the right place and the command center is struck.
Iran's Fatter 2 hypersonic missile struck a fortified IDF command center.
Seven senior Israeli officers are dead.
10 interceptors were fired at the incoming missile before impact. All 10
failed. All 10.
And the deepest story is not just that the command center was hit. It is what Yuval Basesi, vice president of Raphael
Advanced Defense Systems, Israel's own premier missile defense manufacturer, said publicly about why. And I want to
spend some time on what Bazesi said because I think it is remarkable for its honesty coming as it does from the vice
president of the company that built the interceptors that failed. Yuval Basesi,
vice president of Raphael Advanced Defense Systems in August 2025, highlighted that the Fatar 2 had forced
the firm and the Israel Defense Forces to rethink their approach to missile defense. He said hypersonic missiles
defense. He said hypersonic missiles open a new era in air defense. He warned
the traditional approaches could not be relied upon against them. And then he offered this analogy which I think
captures the physics of the intercept problem with rather devastating clarity.
Drawing an analogy to basketball, Besi observed, "One interceptor missile tracking one hypersonic missile is like
defending LeBron James with a single player. You may keep chasing him, but
player. You may keep chasing him, but you won't stop him from scoring. one
interceptor against one hypersonic missile like defending LeBron James with a single player. He instead suggested a
zone defense model under which multiple interceptors covered defined areas and engaged threats as they approached. as
Israel has yet to show signs of being able to implement this approach, which even if financed would take several years and likely cost tens of billions
of dollars, it is likely that Iran's fatter 2 arsenal will continue to be able to penetrate Israeli defenses with
impunity.
So the vice president of the company that built Israel's missile defense systems is saying publicly that the
defense cannot stop the fatter 2 as currently configured. that the solution
currently configured. that the solution would take several years and cost tens of billions of dollars to implement and
that in the meantime Iran's Fatter 2 arsenal will continue to penetrate Israeli defenses with impunity.
That is the public assessment of Israel's own primary missile defense manufacturer.
And against that backdrop, the Israeli and American governments are continuing to tell their publics that the operation is proceeding successfully,
that Iranian military capabilities have been largely degraded, and that the situation is under control. I think the
gap between those two sets of statements is rather difficult to bridge.
Now the seven officers because I want to think about what the loss of seven
senior officers in a single strike means operationally rather than simply as a casualty figure.
Military command structures are not interchangeable.
A senior officer represents not merely a body filling a position in an organizational chart, but a specific
irreplaceable accumulation of institutional knowledge, operational experience,
personal relationships with subordinate commanders, and decisionmaking capacity that has been built up over decades.
When you lose seven senior officers in a single strike on a command facility, you do not simply subtract seven names from
a list and promote seven others. You
create a rupture in the operational continuity of the command network.
There are plans that only those seven people knew the full details of. There
are relationships between commanders that those seven officers were the connecting tissue of.
There are ongoing operations, deconliction arrangements, targeting decisions that were running through that command center when the Fatter 2
arrived.
What seven dead senior officers means for Israeli military command capacity is not the collapse of the network, but the
specific operational friction that every command decision now pays.
Every decision now costs more, takes longer, goes through improvised channels that have not been practiced and tested.
And in a highintensity conflict where decision speed is itself a military capability, that friction is not a minor
inconvenience.
It is a genuine degradation of combat effectiveness.
And this strike did not happen in isolation. Iran has fired deadly cluster
isolation. Iran has fired deadly cluster missiles at central Israel in what it says is revenge for Israel's
assassination of its security chief, Ali Larijani. As the war the United States
Larijani. As the war the United States and Israel triggered against Iran rages towards a third week, the assassination
of Larry Johnny, which I want to address directly because I think it represents a significant escalation and a significant
miscalculation.
Ali Larry Johnny was, as I said in several programs over the past three weeks, the man who appeared to be
coordinating Iran's strategic and military response to this war. He was
the most important figure in the Iranian war effort after Kamina's death. He was
the person who issued the public refusal of ceasefire negotiations.
He was the person who said we will not negotiate.
And he was the person who in the calculation of the American and Israeli planners needed to be removed if the Iranian war machine was to be
decapitated.
Well, he has been removed and Iran's response was to fire the Fatar 2 at a
fortified IDF command center, killing seven senior officers and to launch what Alazer described as deadly cluster
missiles at central Israel.
The response to Larry's assassination was not collapse. It was escalation.
As I have said repeatedly throughout this conflict, decapitation does not produce regime change when the
institution being led is more resilient than a single individual.
Since the 2026 Iran war began with a series of attacks by the United States and Israel against Iran on February 28th 2026
locations across Israel have been subject to multiple retaliatory Iranian
missile strikes. Despite a robust system
missile strikes. Despite a robust system of missile defense, warning alerts, and shelters, Iranian missiles have struck
multiple positions across the country.
The phrase robust system of missile defense is doing rather a lot of work in
that sentence given that 10 arrow interceptors failed to stop a single fat 2. But let us set that aside and look at
2. But let us set that aside and look at the aggregate picture.
525 ballistic missiles have been launched from Iran toward Israel since the conflict began and Iranian strikes have
reached military and government sites, apartments, a research center and a hospital.
The layered defense has intercepted a significant proportion of these. The
Iron Dome, Arrow 2, Arrow 3, and David Sling systems working together have performed better against conventional
ballistic threats than against the Fatter 2 specifically.
But the Fatter 2 does not need to be used in large numbers to produce strategic effect. A single missile
strategic effect. A single missile killed seven senior officers at a hardened command facility.
The mathematics of strategic impact per launch are entirely different from those of conventional ballistic missiles. And
there is a further dimension to this that I think is rather significant and that has been somewhat underd discussed in the coverage.
The use of the fatter 2 to strike very high value Israeli command infrastructure not only demonstrates the high levels of
precision achieved but also the missile's ability to gather intelligence within Israel. What does that mean in
within Israel. What does that mean in practice? It means that the targeting
practice? It means that the targeting data for the command center strike was accurate enough to place the warhead
precisely on a hardened facility. Not in
the general vicinity of it, not in the right district of the right city, but on the specific building, on the specific
structure at the specific location.
That requires intelligence. It requires
surveillance. It requires knowledge of exactly where that command facility is and what its coordinates are with
sufficient precision to feed into the guidance system of a MAC 15 maneuvering glide vehicle. How did Iran acquire that
glide vehicle. How did Iran acquire that intelligence?
That question has not been adequately addressed in any of the official statements I have seen and I think it deserves to be asked rather urgently
because if Iran has the intelligence collection capability to precisely locate hardened IDF command facilities,
the implications for the security of every Israeli and American military installation in the region are rather uncomfortable.
The combined USIsraeli force has designed its campaign to destroy Iran's ballistic missile capabilities
before the force depletes its interceptor stockpiles.
The destruction of missile launchers mitigates the risk that either the United States or Israel will run out of
interceptors by limiting Iran's ability to launch missiles in the first place.
That is the official American strategic logic. Destroy the launchers faster than
logic. Destroy the launchers faster than the interceptors run out. And the
decrease in Iranian missile attacks against Israel and the UAE strongly suggests that the effort to destroy
ballistic missile launchers has had considerable success.
That may be partially true for conventional ballistic missile launchers which are larger, less mobile and more detectable. But the Fetu launchers are
detectable. But the Fetu launchers are road mobile. They can be moved between
road mobile. They can be moved between engagements and you need far fewer of them because a single fetaru does the
work of dozens of conventional missiles and 10 arrow interceptors cannot stop
it. The race to destroy launchers faster
it. The race to destroy launchers faster than interceptors are depleted assumes that the missile requiring interception
is a conventional ballistic missile that the interceptors can actually intercept.
The Fetar 2 breaks that assumption at its foundation. Day 20. Seven senior IDF
its foundation. Day 20. Seven senior IDF officers dead. One fortified command
officers dead. One fortified command center destroyed, 10 interceptors fired,
zero kills. And the vice president of
zero kills. And the vice president of Raphael Advanced Defense Systems says the solution to this problem will take
several years and cost tens of billions of dollars. Iran says it has not yet
of dollars. Iran says it has not yet used its most potent systems. And the Futura 2, the weapon that cannot be
reliably intercepted by any currently deployed system in the Israeli or American arsenal, has now demonstrated that it can precisely target and
penetrate the hardened command infrastructure that the Israeli military's decisionmaking depends upon.
Anyway, that is me for today. In these
very difficult and dangerous days, wherever you are watching from, I wish you peace and safety. Have a very good
Loading video analysis...