
Can Iran Really Sink America's Aircraft Carrier Abraham Lincoln?
India Today
Iran has missiles fast enough to threaten US warships, but not the sensors needed to find them. Against a mobile aircraft carrier protected by layered defences, hypersonic speed alone is not enough to guarantee a decisive strike.
As tensions in West Asia simmer, the arrival of the US Navy’s aircraft carrier strike group led by USS Abraham Lincoln in the northern Arabian Sea has reignited a long-standing question in strategic circles: could Iran realistically threaten, or even sink a US aircraft carrier?
On paper, President Donald Trump would now have the option to order air strikes on Iran at short notice. The Abraham Lincoln, a Nimitz-class nuclear-powered carrier, brings with it around 60 F/A-18 Super Hornet fighter jets, placing large swathes of Iranian territory within striking distance.
But while US power projection is formidable, Iran is not without options of its own.
Iran’s Weak Air Force, Strong Missile Arsenal
Iran’s conventional air force is widely regarded as outdated and limited. Years of sanctions have left Tehran with a shrinking fleet of ageing combat aircraft, far fewer than the fighter jets embarked aboard a single US carrier.

When we look at Iran through the prism of religion and see a Shia Islamic country, we negate its thousands of years of rich pre-Islamic Persian culture. A dive into the world of Zoroastrianism and Vedas shows us how Indians and Iranians have been sharing languages, Gods, sciences and a sacred fire for thousands of years.












