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Iran War costs USA $11 Billion In 6 Days

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On Thursday, March 12, 2026, a private Pentagon briefing to Congress revealed that the first six days of the military campaign against Iran, dubbed “Operation Epic Fury,” cost the United States at least $11.3 billion.

The figure highlights an extraordinary “burn rate” of nearly $1.9 billion per day, far exceeding early projections.


Cost Breakdown: Where the Money Went

The $11.3 billion estimate, provided to lawmakers on Tuesday, reflects the intensity of the initial air and naval strikes.

  • Munitions Expenditure ($5.6 Billion): Nearly half of the total bill was spent in just the first 48 hours. The U.S. relied heavily on high-end precision weapons, including Tomahawk cruise missiles ($2M each) and JSOW glide bombs ($280k–$700k each).
  • Defensive Interceptors: A significant portion of the cost comes from shooting down Iranian retaliatory barrages. Using multi-million dollar Patriot and THAAD interceptors to destroy cheap Iranian drones has created what analysts call an “unfavorable cost exchange.”
  • Operational Costs: This includes fuel and maintenance for high-tempo sorties by B-2 stealth bombers, F-35s, and carrier strike groups (USS Abraham Lincoln and USS Gerald R. Ford), which cost an estimated $15 million per day just to keep afloat.

U.S. Asset Losses

Beyond operational spending, the conflict has resulted in roughly $2.55 billion in damaged or destroyed U.S. military equipment:

  • The Qatar Radar Hit: An Iranian missile strike on Al-Udeid Air Base destroyed an AN/FPS-132 early warning radar valued at $1.1 billion.
  • Aviation Losses: At least three F-15E Strike Eagles were lost in a friendly-fire incident with Kuwaiti defenses (replacement cost: $282 million), and four MQ-9 Reaper drones have been downed.
  • THAAD Components: Radar components for the THAAD system were reportedly destroyed in the UAE and Jordan, with each unit valued at $500 million.

Economic & Political Fallout

AspectCurrent Situation (March 12, 2026)
Emergency FundingThe White House is expected to request a $50 billion supplemental budget from Congress this week to replenish stockpiles.
Stockpile DepletionLawmakers have expressed “deep alarm” that the war is eroding the U.S. military’s readiness for other theaters, specifically the Indo-Pacific.
Trump’s ReactionPresident Trump has claimed “we’ve already won,” despite the rising costs, and maintains that the campaign is “ahead of schedule.”
Market ImpactThe “financial clock” is ticking; analysts warn that a 6-month conflict at this rate would cost over $250 billion in direct military spend alone.

The “Shift to Cheap” Strategy

To mitigate these spiraling costs, Pentagon officials have indicated a transition toward “low-cost” offensive tools. This includes the wider use of JDAM guidance kits ($38k) and the deployment of LUCAS drones, which are ironically reverse-engineered from the same low-cost Iranian tech (Shahed-136) they are currently fighting.

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