Officials say KC-135 tankers were hit while parked at Prince Sultan Air Base but are expected to return to service
An Iranian missile strike has damaged five United States Air Force KC-135 Stratotanker refueling aircraft at a major military installation in Saudi Arabia, according to officials familiar with the incident.
The aircraft were struck while parked on the flight line at Prince Sultan Air Base, a key facility supporting American operations in the Middle East.
Officials said the planes sustained damage but were not destroyed, and repairs are underway to restore them to service.
No U.S. personnel were killed in the attack, which took place amid escalating hostilities between the United States, Israel and Iran across the region.
The strike forms part of a broader Iranian campaign targeting American-linked military infrastructure in the Gulf as tensions intensify.
Prince Sultan Air Base, located southeast of Riyadh, hosts significant U.S. military assets and plays a central role in sustaining air operations across the Middle East.
The KC-135 Stratotanker aircraft stationed there provide aerial refueling for fighter jets and other military aircraft, enabling long-range missions and extended combat operations.
Military analysts say damage to refueling aircraft can have an outsized impact on operational capabilities, since aerial tankers form the logistical backbone of modern air campaigns.
Even limited disruptions to tanker fleets can reduce sortie rates and complicate long-distance strike planning.
The missile strike is one of the most notable confirmed attacks on U.S. aviation assets during the current conflict.
It comes at a time when Iran has intensified missile and drone attacks against regional targets linked to American and allied military activity.
President
Donald Trump said the aircraft had not been destroyed and emphasized that most of them suffered only limited damage.
According to the president, four of the tankers were already returning to operational status while a fifth sustained somewhat greater damage but is expected to be repaired.
The incident adds to a series of military setbacks and hazards affecting tanker aircraft during the conflict.
In a separate incident earlier in the week, two KC-135 refueling planes collided during operations over Iraq, resulting in the loss of one aircraft and the deaths of six crew members.
The attack highlights the growing reach of the conflict across the Gulf region and underscores the strategic importance of protecting logistics infrastructure that supports ongoing military operations.