Published: March 30, 2026. The English Chronicle Desk.
The English Chronicle Online
Newly surfaced photographs and verified satellite imagery have confirmed the destruction of a US Air Force E-3 Sentry (AWACS) radar aircraft at Prince Sultan Air Base in Saudi Arabia, marking one of the most expensive and strategically significant losses for the United States since the war with Iran began on February 28. The images, which began circulating on social media over the weekend, show the $300 million “eye in the sky” with its rear fuselage completely severed and its iconic rotating radar dome shattered on the tarmac. US Central Command (CENTCOM) has remained tight-lipped, but defense analysts describe the hit as a “calculated decapitation” of American battlespace awareness in the region.
The strike, which occurred in the early hours of Friday, March 27, reportedly involved a “coordinated precision barrage” of at least one Iranian ballistic missile and a swarm of one-way attack drones. Beyond the destruction of the E-3 Sentry (serial #81-0005), the attack wounded 12 American service members, with at least two reported to be in serious condition. Military experts note that the E-3 is not just an airplane; it is a flying command center that coordinates fighter jets, detects incoming missiles, and manages the complex “air-to-air” refueling operations essential for long-range missions over Iran.
The loss is particularly painful for the Pentagon due to the “rickety” state of the aging AWACS fleet. The US only had 16 operational E-3s remaining before this strike, and the fleet has struggled with maintenance issues for years. With its successor, the E-7 Wedgetail, still years away from full deployment, the destruction of a single Sentry creates immediate “coverage gaps” in the Gulf. “The value of the E-3 is that they are the chessmasters,” noted former F-16 pilot Heather Penney. “Without them, our fighter pilots are flying half-blind into one of the most contested airspaces on Earth.”
Satellite analysis from the Copernicus service suggests the E-3 was not the only victim. A large burn mark on the main apron indicates that at least one KC-135 Stratotanker—a critical aerial refueling jet—was also likely destroyed in the same barrage. This follows a pattern of Iranian “enabler hunting,” where Tehran has specifically targeted the “soft” infrastructure of US airpower, such as tankers, radar facilities, and THAAD missile defense systems in Jordan and the UAE, rather than engaging fighter jets in direct dogfights.
The diplomatic fallout is equally intense. Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy claimed in an interview with NBC that Russian satellite imagery of the Saudi base was shared with Iran just days before the attack. “We know that if they make images once, they are preparing… the third time it means they will attack,” Zelenskyy said, alleging “100 percent” cooperation between Moscow and Tehran. While the US continues to hammer Iranian production facilities, the March 27 strike proves that Iran retains a “surgical” long-range strike capability that can penetrate even the most heavily defended allied bases.
As the Iran war enters its fifth week and oil prices surge past $115 a barrel, the “ripple of fear” is no longer just a metaphor for the economy; it is a literal reality for US personnel stationed in the line of fire. The “meltdown” of regional air defenses and the loss of a “strategic crown jewel” like the AWACS suggests that the air war is far from won, and the cost of maintaining the blockade is rising by the hour.



























































































