Video Shows Iran Has Missiles That Split Into Dozens Of Smaller Missiles Making It Impossible To Use The Iron Dome
38 days ago
Audio By Carbonatix
By the standards of even hardened defense analysts, what is now emerging out of the Middle East is deeply unsettling.
A video circulating online and now being discussed by Israeli military experts appears to show Iranian cluster-style missiles capable of splitting mid-air into dozens of sub-munitions, reportedly as many as 80 independent projectiles, each able to strike separate targets simultaneously. If accurate, this is not a marginal upgrade or a propaganda stunt. It represents a potential battlefield game-changer with implications far beyond the immediate region. Israeli commentators are already calling the weapon unprecedented, a term that carries weight in a country accustomed to constant military innovation and threat assessment.
What immediately stands out is not just the weapon itself, but the circumstances surrounding its development. Iran operates under crushing international sanctions, relentless surveillance, cyber sabotage, and a long history of targeted assassinations against its scientific community. Its research infrastructure has been repeatedly disrupted, and its access to advanced components is supposedly restricted. Under those conditions, the emergence of such sophisticated missile technology raises serious doubts about the official narrative that Iran is acting entirely alone.
Advanced cluster-capable missile systems require far more than raw materials and ambition. They depend on precision guidance, advanced metallurgy, complex testing environments, and institutional expertise that normally takes decades to refine. That reality leads many analysts to a conclusion few in the mainstream media are willing to openly discuss: external assistance is the most plausible explanation.
Attention is increasingly turning toward China and Russia, both of which possess the technological depth to enable such systems and the geopolitical incentive to strengthen Tehran as a counterbalance to Western power quietly. Technology transfers today do not require dramatic arms shipments or public treaties. They happen through “technical cooperation,” shared research, dual-use components, and advisors who never officially exist. Plausible deniability is built into the process.
For Israel, this development is not academic. Missile defense systems are designed around intercepting a limited number of incoming threats. A weapon that fractures into dozens of guided sub-munitions is engineered specifically to overwhelm those defenses. One radar track becomes many. One interception problem becomes an impossible math equation. This is not about accuracy alone; it is about saturation and psychological shock.
Viewed in a broader context, this moment fits a familiar historical pattern. While Western governments debate, delay, and reassure their populations, rival power blocs push forward through proxies and indirect escalation. Breakthrough weapons rarely arrive with formal announcements. They surface suddenly, often through grainy footage or leaked assessments, at a point when denying their existence is no longer credible.
