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ABD, İran Saldırıları Sonrası Körfez Üslerini İsrail'e Taşımayı Planlıyor

Summary · AI generated

Amerika Birleşik Devletleri, İran'ın füze ve drone saldırıları sonrasında Ortadoğu'daki askeri varlığının bir kısmını daha batıya, potansiyel olarak İsrail'e taşımayı değerlendiriyor. Wall Street Journal'ın raporuna göre, saldırılar Bahreyn'deki Beşinci Filo Karargahı dahil 11 ABD askeri tesisinde yaklaşık 5 milyar dolar hasara yol açtı. Bu değerlendirme, Washington'ın bölgedeki askeri duruşunda bir değişiklik sinyali olarak görülüyor. Beşinci Filo'nun Bahreyn'deki varlığı uzun süredir ABD'nin Körfez'deki deniz gücünün merkezi konumunda bulunuyor.

This summary is currently in Turkish; automated English translation is coming soon.

Started 29 Jun, 02:45 2 events Updated 4d ago
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latest: 4d ago
  1. Security29 Jun, 02:45

    US weighs shifting Gulf bases after strikes

    • May move some military assets in Middle East farther west, potentially to Israel • Fifth Fleet HQ in Bahrain among most affected sites, says WSJ • Estimates suggest $5bn damage across 11 US military installations WASHINGTON: The United States is weighing the relocation of parts of its military footprint in the Middle East further westward, potentially to Israel, as Iranian missile and drone strikes expose serious vulnerabilities in forward-deployed bases across the Gulf, according to media and think tank assessments. The reported strikes, which followed the start of the US-Israeli bombing campaign in Iran on Feb 28, are said to have hit multiple American and allied military installations across the region. The attacks are reported to have killed 13 service members and wounded hundreds, although a comprehensive accounting of casualties and damage has not yet been made public. According to the Wall Street Journal, one of the most significant sites affected was Naval Support Activity (NSA) in Bahrain, the headquarters of the US Navy’s Fifth Fleet, located approximately 240 kilometres south of Iran. The base sustained damage to a range of facilities, including the Fifth Fleet headquarters building, barracks, warehouses and a potable water tank. Estimates cited in reporting place damage to the installation at around $400 million, with portions of the destruction not fully acknowledged publicly by the Pentagon. The strikes have triggered internal deliberations within the US administration over whether to significantly reshape its military posture in the Gulf. US officials cited in reporting say options under consideration include relocating key command centres underground at NSA Bahrain, reinforcing hardened facilities, and in some cases opting not to rebuild certain damaged structures. Washington is also reassessing its presence in other Gulf states, including Kuwait and Saudi Arabia, with discussions under way about shifting certain military assets further west. One location being examined in early-stage planning is Israel, where US military aircraft have reportedly been stationed at Ben Gurion Airport since the build-up to the conflict, the Journal reported. Independent assessments of the damage vary but point in the same direction: significant disruption to US military infrastructure across the region. The American Enterprise Institute estimates that Iranian strikes caused roughly $5 billion in damage across 70 structures at 11 US military installations in seven countries. Its report argues that the scale and spread of the damage may force not only extensive rebuilding, but also selective abandonment or relocation of vulnerable facilities, given the growing risks posed by sustained missile and drone warfare against fixed bases. Published in Dawn, June 29th, 2026

  2. Security02 Jul, 02:34

    US to form specialised ‘anti-drone force’

    WASHINGTON: The United States Air Force is creating a new military speciality dedicated to defending its air bases against missile and drone attacks, after recent conflicts exposed vulnerabilities at American military installations in the Middle East and elsewhere. The move follows an internal review of the Iran war by senior Air Force commanders, who concluded that the growing threat posed by inexpensive but highly effective drones and precision-guided missiles requires personnel specially trained to protect military bases. According to Air & Space Forces Magazine, the Air Force also plans to establish dedicated air base defence units at selected installations. These units will bring together personnel from different military occupations and train them to detect, track and defeat incoming drones and missiles. US officials were alarmed by Ukraine’s 2025 ‘Operation Spiderweb’, in which remotely piloted drones struck Russian strategic bombers parked at air bases deep inside Russia. The operation prompted the Pentagon to reassess the protection of American military installations. The Air Force has also faced criticism at home after unidentified drones repeatedly flew over Langley Air Force Base in Virginia in late 2023. Similar incidents we­­­­re later reported at bases in Ohio, Utah and Britain. The urgency of strengthening air base defences increased after Iranian missile and drone attacks during the recent Iran-US conflict damaged several American military facilities in the Gulf. Reports said aircraft were destroyed or damaged on the ground, while key command facilities at Al Udeid Air Base in Qatar and the US Navy’s Fifth Fleet headquarters in Bahrain also sustained significant damage. The challenge is particularly acute in the Indo-Pacific region, where American air bases in Japan are within range of China’s expanding missile arsenal. Although the US Army operates Patriot missile defence systems, military officials acknowledge there are not enough batteries to protect every Air Force installation. The Air Force is seeking about $1.4 billion in its proposed 2027 budget for a new air base missile defence system, but officials say it will take several years before the capability becomes operational. Air Force Secretary Troy E. Meink told Congress in May that protecting military bases had become an increasingly important priority. The Air Force has not announced when the new specialised force will become operational, as developing training programmes and integrating the new role into the service are expected to take time. Published in Dawn, July 2nd, 2026

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