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U.S. B-52H Bombers Seen with JASSM Missiles Conduct Standoff Strikes in Iran Campaign.
A U.S. Air Force B-52H Stratofortress shown by U.S. Central Command being refueled during a March 20 combat mission in support of Operation Epic Fury appears to be carrying AGM-158 JASSM-family cruise missiles under its wings.
U.S. Central Command imagery released March 24 shows the bomber refueling mid-mission during Operation Epic Fury, a campaign that has expanded to more than 9,000 strikes and 9,000 combat sorties. The scale underscores a sustained air campaign targeting Iran’s missile forces, naval assets, and command networks, with B-52 bombers acting as high-capacity standoff strike assets.
A U.S. Air Force B-52H Stratofortress refuels in flight during Operation Epic Fury, apparently carrying AGM-158 JASSM-family standoff missiles for long-range precision strikes against high-value Iranian military targets (Picture source: U.S. DoW).
CENTCOM posted the image on March 24, while its official Epic Fury material says the operation began on Feb. 28 and by March 16 had already involved more than 7,000 strikes, 6,500 combat flights and over 100 Iranian vessels damaged or destroyed; media reports citing CENTCOM’s March 23 update said the tally had grown to more than 9,000 targets, 9,000 combat flights and 140 vessels. That scale matters because it shows the B-52 is not a symbolic presence in this campaign, but part of a sustained attritional architecture aimed at Iran’s missile, naval, command-and-control, and defense-industrial networks.
Technically, the B-52 remains one of the few aircraft in U.S. service able to combine intercontinental reach with mass. The Air Force lists payload at about 70,000 pounds, unrefueled range at 8,800 miles, speed around Mach 0.84, and ceiling of 50,000 feet; official Epic Fury imagery also describes the bomber as supporting strategic attack, close air support, air interdiction, offensive counter-air, and maritime operations. With tanker support, it makes it an endurance platform for repeated standoff launches rather than a single-pass striker.
The visible stores in the CENTCOM image are consistent with AGM-158-series missiles, but the photograph alone cannot prove whether they are baseline AGM-158A JASSM-BL or AGM-158B JASSM-ER. That distinction matters operationally, yet it is hard to make visually because the standard JASSM and JASSM-ER share the same external airframe; the main differences are internal fuel volume and engine type, not outer shape.
Both versions are low-observable, subsonic, air-launched cruise missiles designed to hit high-value, well-defended fixed or relocatable targets. CSIS lists the baseline missile at roughly 370 km and the ER variant at about 1,000 km, both using INS/GPS navigation with an infrared terminal seeker and a 432 kg-class WDU-42/B penetrator/blast-fragmentation warhead, exactly the kind of weapon suited for command posts, missile storage areas, air-defense nodes, production plants, and hardened support facilities.
On the carriage side, Air Force modernization work gave the B-52 the option of carrying up to 12 JASSM-ERs on external pylons and eight more J-series weapons internally for a 20-missile load. That matters far more than the raw number suggests: a single bomber can generate a saturation-level salvo against separated aimpoints, or mass fires against one defended complex, while remaining well away from the target area. Readers looking for related Army Recognition coverage can connect this episode to [internal link: B-52 AGM-158 loadout analysis], [internal link: B-52 GBU-31 employment shift], and [internal link: bomber reinforcement to the United Kingdom].
In the current Iran campaign, an ER loadout would make the most military sense, although that remains an analytical judgment rather than a confirmed identification. Air Force budget documents state the AGM-158A is no longer in production, while AGM-158B and AGM-158B-2 ER variants are fielded, and official Air Force imagery from Epic Fury says the B-52 has already been delivering stand-off munitions against regional objectives. In other words, the photographed configuration is fully consistent with a mission profile built around distance, survivability, and preplanned precision attack.
What are those armaments for in the Iran war? CENTCOM’s own target lists answer that directly: ballistic missile sites, integrated air defenses, military communications, anti-ship missile positions, weapons-production and storage bunkers, drone-manufacturing facilities, IRGC command nodes, and naval assets threatening shipping. Reuters also reported a March 13 U.S. strike on Kharg Island that destroyed naval mine storage sites and missile bunkers while sparing oil infrastructure, illustrating the kind of high-value military targets a JASSM-armed bomber force is meant to service. Official CENTCOM updates further said U.S. forces had used deep-penetrator munitions on hardened coastal missile sites near the Strait of Hormuz, underlining that the campaign is attacking complete kill chains, not isolated targets.
Standard JASSM, however, is a land-attack weapon, not the dedicated anti-ship missile in the family. If these were AGM-158s, their most plausible tasks would be fixed shore targets, launch bunkers, depots, headquarters, air-defense batteries, radar sites, or vessels in port; the specialized maritime-hunting role belongs to LRASM, the anti-ship derivative. That distinction matters in the Gulf because neutralizing Iran’s coastal anti-access network is often more operationally decisive than chasing mobile ships at sea.
Tactically, the B-52/JASSM combination gives U.S. commanders three advantages over shorter-range fighters carrying direct-attack bombs. It expands launch baskets beyond dense surface-to-air threat rings, compresses strike timelines through salvo fire against multiple coordinates, and preserves scarce stealth fighters for escort, suppression, dynamic targeting, or follow-on penetration. Mid-air refueling adds another layer of flexibility by letting commanders delay release, reposition the bomber, and choose a safer axis of attack before committing the salvo. The B-52 in this role is less a legacy bomber than a standoff missile carrier with global reach.
In the wider Iran war, that makes the B-52 a campaign-level instrument rather than a tactical curiosity. Operation Epic Fury is focused on dismantling Iran’s ability to project force against U.S. positions, allied states and commercial shipping, and the pause discussed in Washington does not reportedly apply to military targets, naval assets, ballistic missile sites, or the defense industrial base. A refueled B-52 carrying long-range conventional cruise missiles fits exactly into that logic: it sustains pressure on Iranian missile regeneration, coastal denial systems and command infrastructure without forcing the launch aircraft into the most dangerous airspace on every sortie.
There is also an industrial signal in this image. The Air Force’s FY2026 missile budget says JASSM is in the third year of a multiyear procurement intended to stabilize output, with base-budget funding for 144 missiles and mandatory reconciliation funding for 245 additional rounds, reflecting how quickly a major theater campaign can consume precision standoff weapons. For Army Recognition’s audience, the deeper meaning of CENTCOM’s photograph is therefore not only that a B-52 is in the fight, but that the United States is using legacy bombers, tanker endurance, and a growing missile inventory to wage a high-volume, operational-depth air campaign against Iran’s warfighting system.