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U.S. Precision Airstrike Destroys Russian-Supplied Tor-M1 Air Defense System in Iranian Service.
U.S. Central Command released a video on 2 March showing what it described as U.S. strikes on Iranian military targets, including footage of a short-range air defence vehicle believed to be a Russian-supplied Tor-M1 system. The action is part of “Operation Epic Fury,” a broad campaign targeting Iranian command, missile, and air-defence infrastructure in response to Tehran’s regional attacks.
On 2 March 2026, U.S. Central Command (CENTCOM) released official video footage on its X account documenting a precision airstrike that destroyed what appears to be a Russian-supplied Tor-M1 short-range surface-to-air missile (SAM) system operated by Iranian forces. The strike occurred amid intensified U.S. and Israeli operations targeting Iranian command, missile, and air-defense assets, following a series of missile and drone attacks launched by Tehran across the region. CENTCOM characterized the strike as part of ongoing efforts to disrupt and degrade Iran’s ballistic missile capabilities and to safeguard U.S. personnel and allied forces. While Army Recognition has identified the destroyed vehicle as an Iranian-operated Tor-M1 system, U.S. officials have yet to formally confirm its precise variant or operator.
A U.S. strike under “Operation Epic Fury” destroyed an Iranian‑operated, Russian‑supplied Tor‑M1 system, intensifying efforts to weaken Tehran’s air‑defense network (Picture Source: U.S. CENTCOM / Iranian Media)
In its accompanying statement, CENTCOM accused Iran of continuing to launch ballistic missiles “maliciously” at military and civilian locations and stressed that U.S. forces will keep hunting the launch infrastructure that enables those attacks, adding that American resolve “has never been stronger.” The command did not specify which airframe or platform conducted the strike, nor did it detail the precise location of the engagement inside Iran. The visual sequence, however, shows a precision weapon impacting a tracked, radar-equipped air-defense vehicle moments after it fires, suggesting a deliberate effort to suppress point-defense assets protecting ballistic missile units or other high-value nodes. From a U.S. operational perspective, neutralizing such systems is a prerequisite for sustained air operations over Iranian territory and for the protection of U.S. and coalition aircraft enforcing the current campaign.
Iranian defense records indicate that Tehran’s Tor inventory comprises exclusively the Tor-M1 variant, procured from Russia under a contract signed in late 2005 and fulfilled between 2006 and 2007. Moscow supplied a total of 29 Tor-M1 launchers along with over 700 missiles, providing Iran with a modern, mobile short-range air-defense capability designed primarily to protect strategic sites, including nuclear facilities and key command nodes, from Western air and missile attacks. As of 2025, publicly available defense assessments continued to list all 29 systems as operational, with no verified evidence of subsequent Tor-M2 acquisitions, highlighting the limited and aging nature of this particular Russian-supplied capability.
Tor-M1 itself is a compact but sophisticated point-defense system. The 34-ton tracked vehicle combines a target-acquisition radar, fire-control radar and eight vertical-launch 9M330/9M331 missiles on a single chassis, allowing it to detect, track and engage threats on the move or from short halts. The system is designed to intercept aircraft, helicopters, cruise missiles, guided bombs, drones and some short-range ballistic threats at ranges typically reported between 12 and 15 km and altitudes up to around 6 km, with missile speeds of over Mach 2. Iranian officials have claimed that their Tor-M1 batteries can track up to 48 targets and engage as many as eight simultaneously using electro-optical and radar guidance, highlighting their role as a dense defensive “bubble” around high-value assets. For U.S. planners, these characteristics make Tor-equipped sites priority targets in any campaign aimed at dismantling Iran’s air-defense network.
Since entering service with Iran in the mid-2000s, the Tor-M1 system has occupied a prominent position within the country’s integrated air-defense network. Iranian crews trained in Russia were among the first to operate the system, which was rapidly incorporated into Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) exercises and early live-fire trials announced in 2007. Tor-M1 batteries were subsequently positioned to defend high-value sites, including nuclear facilities and strategic command centers, forming an inner defensive layer beneath longer-range S-200, S-300, and Bavar-373 systems. The system also figured in one of Iran’s most tragic air-defense incidents: international and Iranian investigations determined that a Tor-M1 unit operated by IRGC personnel mistakenly fired two missiles that downed Ukraine International Airlines Flight PS752 near Tehran in January 2020, killing all 176 people on board. The event highlighted both the operational significance of the system and the hazards inherent in managing short-range SAMs amid complex, high-tension airspace conditions.
At the tactical level, the reported destruction of a Tor‑type air-defense system in Iranian service directly undermines the local defensive network shielding ballistic missile launchers, command nodes, and logistics hubs from U.S. and allied air operations. The Tor‑M1 is designed specifically to counter low‑altitude threats such as standoff munitions and drones, capabilities the U.S. employs extensively in strike campaigns. Eliminating one of these batteries diminishes the likelihood that Iranian air-defense crews can intercept incoming ordnance or challenge strike aircraft operating in contested airspace. For U.S. aircrews, each neutralized Tor launcher effectively widens the corridor of relative safety, granting greater maneuverability, longer mission endurance over targets, and a reduced operational risk for sorties aimed at protecting ground forces and partner populations.
The attrition of Iran’s Tor‑M1 fleet holds implications well beyond the immediate engagement. With only 29 launchers in inventory, a scarce and high‑value asset acquired at significant cost, Iran faces major constraints in replacing such systems under ongoing sanctions and defense trade restrictions. The degradation of this fleet weakens a critical defensive layer shielding assets central to Tehran’s missile and nuclear programs, advancing the broader U.S. objective of constraining Iran’s capacity to threaten regional states and U.S. forces with ballistic and cruise missiles. It also delivers a potent message: Russian‑supplied defenses, even when dispersed and mobile, remain vulnerable to detection and precision targeting. This demonstration resonates not only with Iranian military planners but also with other actors reliant on comparable equipment. For regional partners contending with Iran’s missile and drone attacks, the removal of these air-defense nodes underscores Washington’s readiness to sustain high‑intensity operations aimed at curbing Tehran’s ability to conduct further indiscriminate strikes.
This latest strike underscores the evolving dynamic between U.S. air power and Iran’s Russian‑supplied air defenses, signaling a shift toward a phase of sustained attrition in which each engagement carries both immediate and enduring consequences. While CENTCOM has yet to formally confirm that the system shown in the released footage was an Iranian‑operated Tor‑M1, the broader implication remains clear: U.S. forces are deliberately and systematically targeting the capabilities that underpin Iran’s ballistic missile activities, accepting operational risk to safeguard their own personnel, allied forces, and civilian populations across the region. As operations continue, the loss of each advanced air‑defense unit such as the Tor‑M1 will further challenge Tehran’s defensive planning, while reaffirming Washington’s stated resolve to counter missile threats through precision, persistence, and unmatched technological sophistication.
Written by Teoman S. Nicanci – Defense Analyst, Army Recognition Group
Teoman S. Nicanci holds degrees in Political Science, Comparative and International Politics, and International Relations and Diplomacy from leading Belgian universities, with research focused on Russian strategic behavior, defense technology, and modern warfare. He is a defense analyst at Army Recognition, specializing in the global defense industry, military armament, and emerging defense technologies.