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U.S. Deploys More A-10 Warthog Attack Jets to Hormuz as Ground Operation Option Emerges Against Iran.
The United States is positioning additional A-10C Thunderbolt II aircraft for potential deployment to U.S. CENTCOM as operations against Iran expand, with a possible land operation scheduled.
U.S. Air Forces Central has already deployed A-10s from the 75th Expeditionary Fighter Squadron, with aircraft operating along the Strait of Hormuz against Iranian fast attack craft and coastal targets. Reinforcements would coincide with the arrival of 82nd Airborne troops and additional Marines, as Washington reviews options ranging from maritime security to limited strikes or ground incursions on Iranian territory.
Read also: U.S. A-10 Warthogs Hunt Iranian Fast Attack Craft in Strait of Hormuz During Operation Epic Fury.
A-10C Thunderbolt II attack aircraft deployed for Operation Epic Fury underscore a shift toward persistent close air support, coastal interdiction, and possible battlefield shaping for limited U.S. ground operations against Iranian positions near the Strait of Hormuz (Picture source: U.S. DoW).
That prospective reinforcement would build on a mission already underway. U.S. Air Forces Central has already shown A-10Cs from the 75th Expeditionary Fighter Squadron landing at an undisclosed Middle East base, while official Epic Fury material formally listed A-10 attack jets among the aircraft employed in the campaign. Senior U.S. military officials have also stated that the Warthog is operating on the southern flank against fast attack watercraft in the Strait of Hormuz, even as U.S. strikes have hit military infrastructure on Kharg Island.
The A-10 remains one of the most specialized battlefield attack aircraft in the U.S. inventory. It is a dedicated close-air-support platform built around the 30mm GAU-8/A seven-barrel Gatling gun, which can fire 3,900 rounds per minute. It can also carry up to 16,000 pounds of mixed ordnance on 11 stations, including AGM-65 Maverick missiles, laser- and GPS-guided bombs, 2.75-inch rockets, AIM-9 Sidewinders, chaff, flares, and jammer pods. Its two TF34 engines, broad straight wing, and heavy stores capacity are paired with a combat design centered on endurance and repeat attack passes rather than dash speed.
What makes that armament set operationally relevant against Iran is not only firepower, but discrimination. The A-10 can fly low and relatively slow, loiter over a target area, visually sort small and dispersed threats, and then engage them with the weapon best suited to the tactical problem. Against IRGC fast attack craft, mine-laying boats, truck-mounted anti-ship missiles, mobile air-defense elements, logistics convoys, and revetted launch positions along the coast, that matters more than sheer speed. The aircraft can operate under low ceilings and poor visibility, use night-vision systems, and launch from more austere locations than many fast jets, giving it unusual persistence in the messy lower tier of the battlespace.
This is how the United States is likely to use any enlarged A-10 package against Iran. Strategic bombers, carrier aviation, and stealth fighters are better suited for destroying hardened sites, command nodes, and fixed air-defense architecture in the opening phase. The A-10 sits further down the kill chain. It is a stand-in attack platform for targets that appear late, move often, hide among civilian patterns of life, or require repeated passes for suppression. In Epic Fury, U.S. targeting priorities have included ballistic missile sites, anti-ship positions, naval assets, mine warfare capability, military communications, and weapons production infrastructure. The Warthog is most valuable where those target sets become tactical rather than strategic: the shoreline, the islands, the convoy route, the launch hide, and the boat swarm.
That is also why the appearance of more A-10s would be significant beyond the aircraft themselves. An A-10 surge does not announce a deeper strategic bombing phase; it points to preparation for a more intimate and more dangerous phase of war in which U.S. forces may need persistent armed overwatch close to the surface fight. The arrival of 82nd Airborne troops, combined with the administration’s consideration of missions such as securing oil routes and operating on Iranian territory, strongly suggests that planners are preserving a ground option. In analytical terms, the Warthog is a poor signal for abstract coercion but a strong signal for battlefield shaping ahead of raids, seizures, or limited-entry operations.
The most plausible land scenario is therefore not a massive occupation of Iran, but a limited littoral operation tied to the Strait of Hormuz. Kharg Island stands out because of its military and economic value, and because senior U.S. officials have confirmed that strikes there targeted air defenses, mine storage, and naval infrastructure. If Washington chose to seize or temporarily neutralize key terrain on Kharg or adjacent coastal nodes, A-10s would be used to suppress beach or port defenses, break up Iranian counterattacks, kill light armor and missile vehicles, and provide immediate close air support to light U.S. forces that arrive without heavy armored protection. The aircraft’s enduring close-support role fits precisely with a scenario in which U.S. forces would need persistent tactical aviation over a contested island or coastal objective.
There is another important signal here: the A-10 becomes more useful as Iranian layered air defenses are degraded and as the campaign shifts from opening blows to tactical control. The initial U.S. phase has already focused on establishing air superiority through strikes on command-and-control, naval forces, ballistic missile sites, and intelligence infrastructure. In that environment, the Warthog’s lack of stealth matters less than its ability to remain overhead, respond quickly to troops in contact, and impose constant pressure on Iranian units that depend on movement, concealment, and timing. Every hour an A-10 is overhead is an hour in which a missile transporter, swarm boat commander, or IRGC coastal unit must hesitate, disperse, or remain hidden.
The aircraft’s survivability features also make it relevant in this type of campaign. The A-10 was built around a titanium armored cockpit, redundant flight-control systems, manual reversion capability, self-sealing fuel tanks, and combat-damage tolerance that few fast jets can match. These characteristics were designed for high-threat close-support operations against Soviet ground forces, but they remain relevant in a Gulf battlespace where low-altitude exposure to small arms, anti-aircraft artillery, and short-range air defenses is still a credible risk. Against Iranian coastal defenses and expeditionary naval threats, that durability gives commanders a platform able to absorb punishment while continuing to support troops or maritime interdiction forces.
Its tactical flexibility is equally important: an A-10 package can use Mavericks against boats or armored vehicles, guided bombs against fixed strongpoints, rockets against dispersed light targets, and the GAU-8/A cannon against vehicles, small craft, and exposed personnel. That makes it especially useful in a cluttered environment where target types vary rapidly and where commanders may need immediate response against fleeting threats. Unlike larger strike aircraft optimized for a smaller number of high-value targets, the A-10 can service numerous lower-signature threats over time, which is precisely the kind of workload likely in a confrontation with IRGC naval and coastal forces.
If additional A-10s are indeed moving forward, Washington is preparing for a campaign stage in which tactical persistence matters as much as strategic strike volume. The United States would be signaling readiness not only to keep bombing Iran, but to control pieces of the battlespace that may have to be entered, cleared, secured, or held for a limited time. In that context, the A-10 is not a legacy aircraft waiting for retirement. It is a purpose-built battlefield enabler for a war that may be drifting from long-range punishment toward selective ground action.