Pentagon considering sending airborne troops to Iran – NYT
2026-03-24 - 09:40
A brigade of some 3,000 US paratroopers could join the conflict in the Middle East, the paper has reported Senior US military officials are looking into the possibility of deploying airborne troops to capture Kharg Island, responsible for 90% of Iran’s crude oil exports, the New York Times has reported, citing American defense sources. The US struck military targets on the island sitting around 25 kilometers (15 miles) from the Iranian coast in the Persian Gulf in mid-March, but refrained from hitting the energy infrastructure. Reports have been circulating since then, claiming that Washington could launch a ground operation to take control of the key oil hub in an attempt to cripple Tehran’s economy after three weeks from the start of the US-Israeli war with the Islamic Republic. Iran has been warning that it would set oil and gas facilities in the Gulf nations “on fire” if the move against Kharg Island is made. On Monday, it also threatened to retaliate by mining the Strait of Hormuz and all other waterways in the region. Read more EU warns of ‘critical’ energy situation as Middle East tensions persist (PHOTOS, VIDEOS) The plan under consideration at the Pentagon is to send some 3,000 soldiers from the 82nd Airborne’s “Immediate Response Force,” said to be capable of deploying anywhere around the globe within 18 hours, to carry out the attack on the island, the NYT said in an article on Monday. Another option being discussed is using 2,500 troops from the 31st Marine Expeditionary Unit, which is already on its way to the Middle East, for the operation, it added. There is also a scenario where the paratroopers could augment the marines, current and former officials told the paper. Despite being able to arrive swiftly, the airborne troops lack heavy equipment, possessed by the marines, that would be needed to repel possible Iranian efforts to take Kharg Island back, they explained. The NYT’s sources said that the attack on the oil hub is just prudent planning, stressing that no orders to carry it out have so far been given by the Pentagon or the US Central Command. READ MORE: Trump backs down from strikes on Iran’s power network: What we know so far Former director of the National Counterterrorism Center, Joe Kent, who resigned from