Trump Responds to Reporter on Iran Missile Capacity After Epic Fury
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Summary
The Forbes Breaking News video shows President Trump fielding questions from a reporter about Operation Epic Fury, the US-led campaign against Iran that began February 28, 2026. Trump defends the results of strikes on Iranian ballistic missiles and production capacity while addressing a follow-up on Iran's civilian nuclear program.
The segment consists of Trump's unscripted responses during what appears to be an Air Force One or press interaction, with no additional narration, graphics, or expert guests. It directly quotes Trump's estimates of missile destruction and rationale for sparing certain infrastructure.
Editorial Assessment
The broadcast accurately captures Trump's statements, which largely track official US government claims of over 85% degradation to Iran's missile industrial base and reduced launch capability. Independent assessments indicate substantial damage but note retained stockpiles or underground assets that remain partially functional, introducing some uncertainty on precise percentages and rebuild timelines. The nuclear discussion reflects longstanding Iranian claims versus US skepticism but omits broader context on enrichment activities. Viewers receive direct primary remarks without counterpoints or deeper sourcing on damage estimates.
Key Moments
Operation Epic Fury aimed to destroy Iran's ballistic missiles and production capabilities
Matches official White House and CENTCOM objectives stated at launch and in after-action reports
US forces knocked out 80-85% of Iran's missiles and over 85% of defense industrial base
Aligns with US military briefings citing >85% industrial damage, but US intelligence estimates vary with some indicating roughly half of launchers or stockpiles retained or intact
Iran has the third-largest oil reserves in the world
Confirmed by multiple energy data sources including Worldometer and industry rankings
Iran does not need nuclear power given its oil reserves
Iran maintains civilian nuclear program is for electricity; US policy has long opposed enrichment regardless of stated purpose