Daily Report

March 3, 2026

Three US F-15Es Shot Down by Kuwaiti Friendly Fire; Crews Safe

Three U.S. Air Force F-15E Strike Eagles went down over Kuwait on March 2 during Operation Epic Fury, the U.S. campaign against Iran, but all aircrew ejected safely, U.S. officials told Air & Space Forces Magazine. U.S. Central Command confirmed the incident in a release and said it was an “apparent” case of friendly fire with the fighters shot down by Kuwait air defenses. The F-15Es were engaged in “active combat” against Iranian “aircraft, ballistic missiles, and drones” strikes.

Iran War Boosts Defense Stocks, at Least for Now

Defense specialists’ stock prices jumped March 2, the first day of trading since the United States and Israel launched attacks on Iran, led by the makers of munitions, high-tech defense specialists, and major prime contractors.

Radar Sweep

Trump Won’t Rule Out Sending US Troops into Iran ‘if Necessary’—Tells The Post War Is Progressing ‘Way Ahead of Schedule’

The New York Post

President Trump told The Post on March 2 that he’s not ruling out sending US ground troops into Iran “if they were necessary”—adding that Operation Epic Fury was “way ahead of schedule” after taking out dozens of Tehran’s top officials. “I don’t have the yips with respect to boots on the ground—like every president says, ‘There will be no boots on the ground.’ I don’t say it,” Trump said after launching strikes Feb. 28 to decapitate Iran’s military and political leadership. “I say ‘probably don’t need them,’ [or] ‘if they were necessary.’”

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Trump’s Case for War with Iran Faces Growing Scrutiny

The Wall Street Journal

The Trump administration, in pressing its case for war with Iran, has made a number of accusations about the regime’s threats to its neighbors, U.S. troops, and even the American homeland itself. However, U.S. officials and lawmakers with access to classified information, along with experts who have spent their careers poring over public data and government reports, say the administration’s assertions are incomplete, unsubstantiated, or flat-out wrong.

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The Pentagon’s Favorite Tech Guy Is This Hawaiian Shirt-Wearing Founder

The New York Times

Within minutes of arriving at a security conference with U.S. defense and intelligence officials in December, Palmer Luckey was stopped by a military officer who wanted to talk about killer robots. Clad in a Hawaiian shirt and cargo shorts, Mr. Luckey nodded as the officer gushed over artificial-intelligence-backed drones and submarines made by Mr. Luckey’s defense-technology start-up, Anduril.

How US Cyber Operators Could Take on Iran in Cyberspace as Epic Fury Plays Out

Breaking Defense

When Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff Gen. Dan Caine briefed reporters March 2 on the U.S. military operation against Iran, he made a point to say that US Cyber Command and US Space Command were the “first movers … layering non-kinetic effects, disrupting and degrading and blinding Iran’s ability to see, communicate and respond.”

Iran’s Key Naval Base on Strait of Hormuz Set Ablaze from Strikes

The War Zone

Satellite imagery shows extensive damage to Iran’s naval base at Bandar Abbas, including depicting the IRINS Makran sea base-type ship on fire, following strikes as part of the ongoing U.S.-Israeli campaign. In addition to being the main headquarters for the Iranian Navy, Bandar Abbas is a key installation when it comes to Iran’s aims at controlling the Strait of Hormuz.

One More Thing

New ‘Masters of the Air’ Deluxe Edition Reveals Rare WWII Photos & B-17 Cutaway

Military.com

Two years after the Apple TV+ miniseries Masters of the Air reignited interest in the WWII “Bloody Hundredth,” the book that inspired it is getting a deluxe collector’s upgrade. On March 3, 2026, The Folio Society will release a premium illustrated edition of Donald L. Miller’s “Masters of the Air: How the Bomber Boys Broke Down the Nazi War Machine.”