USS Abraham Lincoln Survives Three-Hour Assault in Persian Gulf: Fictional Naval Showdown
In a dramatic fictional scenario, four Iranian warships launched a coordinated attack against the USS Abraham Lincoln and its escorting destroyers forty-five miles off Iraq. The attackers—two Moughge-class frigates and two corvettes—aimed to encircle the aircraft carrier, firing thirty-six anti-ship missiles and deploying twenty torpedoes in a high-risk saturation assault.
American radar systems detected the maneuver immediately. Defensive measures, including layered missile intercepts, electronic warfare, acoustic countermeasures, and F/A-18 fighter sorties, successfully neutralized the majority of incoming threats. Only two missiles came dangerously close but failed to inflict damage.
Within twenty minutes, the offensive collapsed. The Abraham Lincoln and its destroyers regained the initiative, striking back with Harpoon missiles and air-to-surface attacks. By 11:30, all four attacking ships were destroyed or incapacitated, and a follow-up strike at the Badar Abbas base neutralized six additional vessels and critical logistics facilities.
The operation lasted just over two hours, leaving minimal fictional U.S. casualties while devastating the attacking fleet. Beyond tactical lessons, the scenario underscores the fragility of regional balance and the psychological intensity of modern naval warfare—even in purely imagined situations.