Pro-Iranian propaganda and much of the U.S. media have claimed that Trump is losing the war in Iran, but the data does not support that claim. Thousands of Iranians have died, most of the country’s top leadership has been killed, and in some cases one and even two iterations of their replacements have also been killed.
The Iranian air force and navy have been largely destroyed, along with multiple nuclear facilities, bomb-making factories, launch pads, and other assets necessary for continued war. This is not to say that it is impossible for Iran to continue, but rather that the war is moving in the right direction toward the IRGC’s eventual defeat.
Only 13 U.S. servicemen and women have been killed, both downed pilots have been recovered, and Iran backed down to Trump’s threats to open the Strait of Hormuz or face destruction.
People on social media have repeatedly argued that Iran is winning and that it somehow has a grand victory strategy that includes allowing the U.S. to kill its leaders, scientists, military personnel, and nuclear assets. One outlet even claimed this destruction brings Iran closer to completing a nuclear weapon.
As of April 6, the U.S.-based human rights group HRANA documented 3,597 deaths in Iran from strikes, with military casualties believed to be significantly higher due to limited access and government opacity. Iran International separately reported at least 4,700 security forces killed as of March 31.
Since February 28, U.S. and Israeli attacks have killed the Supreme Leader, the defense minister, the IRGC chief, the chief of staff, the naval commander, the Basij chief, the intelligence minister, and roughly 40 senior officials in total, the worst single leadership loss in Iran’s modern history.
The rapid elimination of replacement commanders has been a defining feature of the conflict. IRGC Intelligence Chief Maj. Gen. Majid Khademi was appointed in June 2025 to replace Mohammad Kazemi, who was killed during the Twelve-Day War, and was himself killed in a U.S.-Israeli airstrike on April 6, 2026, before reaching one year in the role. IRGC Commander-in-Chief Mohammad Pakpour had similarly been appointed less than a year before his own killing.
Iran anticipated this vulnerability, with Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei reportedly instructing officials before his death to designate as many as four predesignated successors for every key post, a concept that became known as the “fourth successor” doctrine.
Defense Secretary Hegseth and CSIS have both confirmed Iran’s air force had been wiped out and its navy destroyed, with over 90 percent of Iran’s naval fleet sunk. Iranian ballistic missile attacks fell 90 percent within a week of the war’s start, with drone attacks down 95 percent. Of the 373 U.S. service members wounded, the vast majority sustained minor injuries, and 330 have already returned to duty.
On April 3, a U.S. fighter jet was shot down over Iran, and both the pilot and weapons systems officer were recovered, the latter on April 5 after a heavy firefight with no additional U.S. casualties. On April 7, Iran agreed to reopen the Strait of Hormuz as a condition of a two-week ceasefire facilitated by Pakistani mediation, in direct response to Trump’s ultimatum.
Regarding the status of Iran’s new Supreme Leader Mojtaba Khamenei, U.S. and Israeli intelligence believe he remains alive based on indirect evidence, but a U.S. official stated there is no proof he is taking the helm. Iranian state-backed outlets have so little verified footage of him that they resorted to circulating AI-generated videos, prompting Iranians to mockingly call him the AI supreme leader. Defense Secretary Hegseth said Mojtaba was wounded and likely disfigured. No verified video, audio, or public appearance has occurred since his appointment.
Claims that the U.S. is losing are based on flawed metrics. The most common objection is that the U.S. has not yet won because the regime has not fallen and Iran has not surrendered, but no one claimed that either of those outcomes had already occurred. The use of the present continuous reflects an ongoing conflict, not a completed set of policy objectives. The claims and their rebuttals are listed below.
Claim: Trump issued multiple ultimatums with deadlines he postponed, showing weakness. Iran ultimately conceded to those demands and agreed to reopen the Strait of Hormuz, vindicating the pressure campaign. The outcome, not the process, is the measure of success.
Claim: The Strait of Hormuz remained closed for weeks, damaging the global economy. Neither the U.S. nor Israel relies on the Strait for oil shipments. Iran agreed to reopen it as a condition of the ceasefire, meaning the U.S. achieved its stated objective on this point.
Claim: No allies joined the military coalition. No allied participation is required for a campaign to succeed. The U.S. and Israel achieved their core military objectives without it, and the absence of allies did not impede the outcome.
Claim: Iran’s mosaic defense doctrine kept missiles and drones flying despite massive degradation. None of Iran’s weapons struck U.S. infrastructure, civilian populations, or ships, and none damaged the U.S. ability to continue fighting. Iranian ballistic missile attacks fell 90 percent and drone attacks 95 percent, while the U.S. expanded strikes deeper into Iranian territory throughout the conflict.
Claim: The regime has not collapsed and has not surrendered unconditionally. The war is not over. Winning is a present-tense description of an ongoing conflict, not a statement that all objectives have been completed.
Claim: Trump backed away from his threat to destroy Iranian civilization. He backed away because Iran gave in. The threat produced the desired result.
Claim: The U.S. agreed to Iran’s 10-point peace plan. Trump received Iran’s proposal and described it as a workable basis for negotiation, not an agreement. The White House noted the publicly released Iranian plan differed from the one actually submitted. Trump has already ruled out key Iranian demands, including uranium enrichment rights. Both sides remain in early negotiations with their own competing proposals still on the table.
None of these are battlefield claims. They are diplomatic, political, and strategic observations that do not dispute the military data, the casualty ratio, the destruction of Iran’s navy and air force, the decapitation of its leadership, and Iran agreeing to reopen the Strait. The claim that the U.S. is not winning is a fabrication.
The post Iran’s Leaders Are Dead, Its Navy Is Sunk, and the Media Says Trump Is Losing appeared first on The Gateway Pundit.