Home Defence And Security Iran Targets Diego Garcia Base in Indian Ocean With Two Missiles?

Iran Targets Diego Garcia Base in Indian Ocean With Two Missiles?

Iran has said nothing so far about targeting Diego Garcia
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Iran has demonstrated a never before known capability, reports the Wall Street Journal, saying that unnamed officials claimed that two missiles were launched at the US-UK base in Diego Garcia in the Indian Ocean, 4000-km away.

It appears neither missile made it: the first one failed mid-flight while the second was engaged by an interceptor fired by a US naval vessel. It’s not clear if the intercept was successful.

Analyst Aadil Brar posted on twitter: “Diego Garcia is not a symbolic outpost; it is a strategic Indian Ocean hub with a long runway for heavy aircraft, major fuel storage, radar facilities, and a deep-water port that supports large naval vessels.

“If this attack is confirmed, the bigger story is not just the miss, but the message: Iran appears willing to threaten a base that helps anchor U.S. military reach across the Middle East and the wider Indian Ocean.”

Public reporting has generally put Iran’s longest-range ballistic missiles in roughly the 2,000 to 2,500 km band, with systems often cited including the Sejjil, Emad, Ghadr, Shahab-3, and Khorramshahr, his post read.

He noted that Diego Garcia sits near the middle of the Indian Ocean, which is a big reason it has long been prized for power projection and logistics. The base can handle heavy aircraft and also has a deep-water port for major naval vessels.

Any strike involving the base is never just about a remote military facility; it also touches wider debates about sovereignty, basing rights, and the U.S.-UK military footprint in the Indian Ocean, Brar’s post said.

Diego Garcia was the base from where the US bombing campaigns in Afghanistan and Iraq were carried out from. It is one of two British facilities the US is currently using for what London describes as “defensive” operations against Iran.

Britain agreed to hand sovereignty of the Chagos Islands back to Mauritius, but retained a lease for the base on Diego Garcia, the largest of the islands. US President Donald Trump has publicly opposed the handover.