CENTCOM chief declares Hamas, Hezbollah, and Houthis ‘completely cut off’ from Iran

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Cooper honored the memory of 14 service members killed in those operations, along with two additional soldiers and one civilian who died in Syria.By Bianca Jones, JFeedThe top American military commander in the Middle East told Congress on Thursday that months of sustained military operations have effectively cut Hamas, Hezbollah and the Houthis off from the weapons and logistical support that Iran has spent decades building for them, a claim that, if it holds, would represent one of the most consequential strategic shifts in the region in a generation.Admiral Brad Cooper, commander of U.S. Central Command, delivered the assessment in testimony that was striking both for its confidence and its candor about what American forces have endured to reach this point.“Today, Hamas, Hezbollah, and the Houthis are completely cut off from Iranian weapons supplies and support from Tehran,” Cooper told lawmakers.“This achievement is not self-evident, nor did it happen by chance. It is the culmination of months of precise planning and decades of experience.”The testimony amounted to a formal declaration that the so-called “Ring of Fire”, Iran’s strategy of encircling Israel with armed proxy movements capable of striking simultaneously from multiple directions, has, at least for now, been broken.The Cost of Getting HereCooper did not present the outcome as a clean or bloodless victory.He walked lawmakers through the toll that Iranian-backed groups have extracted from American forces over the past two and a half years: more than 350 attacks on U.S. personnel and diplomatic delegations, roughly one every three days, killing four soldiers and wounding approximately 200 others.The more recent campaign to sever Iran’s supply lines has been costlier still.Cooper honored the memory of 14 service members killed in those operations, along with two additional soldiers and one civilian who died in Syria.The numbers put a human frame around what might otherwise sound like an abstract strategic achievement.Cutting off Hamas, Hezbollah and the Houthis from Tehran required people to go into harm’s way and not come home.What “Severed” Actually MeansThe practical implications of Cooper’s claim are significant, though analysts will be scrutinizing the details carefully.Iran has long used overland smuggling routes through Iraq and Syria, maritime channels through the Red Sea and Gulf of Aden, and Hezbollah’s own logistics infrastructure in Lebanon to arm its proxies.If those pipelines are genuinely disrupted, all three groups face long-term degradation in their ability to rearm and replenish, a problem that compounds over months and years rather than showing up immediately in the fighting.Cooper credited the 35,000 U.S. service members operating across the CENTCOM theater, noting that over the past seven months they have played “pivotal roles” in virtually every major security development in the region.That framing suggests the disruption of Iran’s proxy supply chains was not a single operation but the cumulative result of sustained, coordinated pressure applied across multiple fronts simultaneously.An Assessment, Not a VerdictWhat Cooper told Congress on Thursday was a military commander’s assessment of conditions on the ground, not a diplomatic settlement or a permanent resolution.Proxy networks do not dissolve overnight, and Iran has shown considerable ingenuity over the decades in reconstructing capabilities after setbacks.Hezbollah retains significant infrastructure in Lebanon despite the damage inflicted over the past year.The Houthis continue to hold territory in Yemen. Hamas, though severely degraded in Gaza, has not ceased to exist as a political or military organization.But the rupture of the supply lines that fed all three is real, and Cooper’s testimony suggests the window in which Iran could restock them remains, for the moment, closed.The post CENTCOM chief declares Hamas, Hezbollah, and Houthis ‘completely cut off’ from Iran appeared first on World Israel News.