Shanaka Anslem Perera ⚡@shanaka86
JUST IN: Satellite imagery from Camp Buehring in Kuwait & other photos circulating on X shows collapsed helicopter hangars with CH-47 Chinook wreckage visible inside. The hangars were not hardened. The helicopters were not dispersed. The drones that destroyed them cost less than the tyres on the aircraft they hit.
This is the arithmetic that is quietly ending the American way of war. A Patriot PAC-3 interceptor costs $4 to $5 million. An Iranian Shahed drone costs $20,000 to $50,000. Iran does not need to overwhelm the shield with quality. It overwhelms it with volume. Send 100 drones at a base. The Patriot battery intercepts 90. The cost of interception: $400 million. The cost of the drones intercepted: $2 million. The cost of the 10 that get through: helicopter hangars in ruins, Chinooks burning, six soldiers dead at the port on March 1, and a logistics chain that now cannot move what it needs to where it needs it.
On March 10, Iranian strikes targeted the AN/TPY-2 radar in Jordan and the AN/FPS-132 radar in Qatar. These are the eyes of the THAAD and Patriot systems. Iran did not try to outrun the interceptors. It tried to blind the radar that guides them. The AN/TPY-2 costs approximately $1.4 billion per unit. The missiles aimed at it cost a fraction. The asymmetry is not a gap. It is a chasm. And the chasm runs in one direction: every exchange depletes the defender faster than the attacker.
Now connect the Chinooks to the F-15E. The CH-47 is the US Army’s primary heavy-lift helicopter. It moves troops, ammunition, fuel, and equipment across the theatre. When an F-15E goes down inside Iran and a combat search-and-rescue mission requires sustained logistics support, the Chinooks are part of the supply chain that keeps the rescue helicopters fuelled, armed, and operational. The hangars that collapsed at Camp Buehring in March contained aircraft that the war needs in April. The destruction of the fleet preceded and compounded the crisis it was built to manage.
The shield fails in two directions simultaneously. At Camp Buehring, drones penetrated the Patriot screen and destroyed helicopters on the ground. At Habshan in Abu Dhabi, the shield worked perfectly and the gas plant caught fire from the debris of successful interceptions. The defence either lets threats through or creates its own damage from the wreckage of what it stops. Either way, infrastructure burns. The physics does not distinguish between a warhead that penetrates and a booster that falls after interception. Both weigh several hundred kilogrammes. Both are subject to gravity. Both start fires.
Iran has identified the economic equation that no Pentagon budget can solve without changing the architecture entirely. As long as interception costs 100 to 250 times more than attack, every salvo is a net transfer of wealth from the defender to the attacker. The $1.5 trillion defence budget proposed this week includes $12 billion for Project Vault to replenish stockpiles. At current exchange ratios, $12 billion buys approximately 2,400 PAC-3 interceptors. Iran can produce the drone equivalent for $120 million. The stockpile replenishment programme is a rounding error on the cost of the problem it was designed to solve.
The Chinooks are burned. The radars have been targeted. The interceptors are depleting. And the pilot who needs rescuing is in the mountains of a country that has learned to win by making victory more expensive than defeat.
open.substack.com/pub/shanakaans…