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Trump Proclaims ‘Complete Capitulation’ as Hegseth and Caine Detail Total Destruction of Iranian Industrial and Naval Power (Video)

The Retribution of Epic Fury: A New Geopolitical Reality

WASHINGTON — In an early-morning briefing at the Pentagon—rebranded as the Department of War (DOW)—Secretary of War Pete Hegseth and Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff General Dan “Razin” Caine stood before a packed press room to declare the operational success of Operation Epic Fury. The briefing, held at 8:00 a.m. EDT on April 8, 2026, followed a series of dramatic social media posts from President Donald Trump, who announced a “double-sided ceasefire” after 40 days of unrelenting air and sea strikes that have fundamentally altered the map of the Middle East.

The Commander-in-Chief’s Declaration

The day began not in the briefing room, but on Truth Social. At 3:00 a.m., President Trump posted a victory declaration that set the tone for the Department of War’s presentation.

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“Iran has submitted a 10-point peace proposal—a COMPLETE CAPITULATION. I have agreed to a two-week ceasefire starting NOW. We have met and EXCEEDED all Military objectives. The Strait of Hormuz is REOPENED, no more illegal tolls! Our warriors are the best in the world. Peace through STRENGTH!”

The President’s post confirmed that the United States had accepted a temporary suspension of hostilities to allow for the finalization of a surrender agreement. However, he made one point crystal clear: the ceasefire was contingent on the “COMPLETE, IMMEDIATE, and SAFE OPENING” of the Strait of Hormuz.

Ending the ‘Tehran Toll Booth’

A primary driver of the final weeks of the conflict was Iran’s desperate attempt to monetize the global energy supply. Secretary Hegseth detailed what he called the “Tehran Toll Booth,” an illegal $2 million transit fee Iran had attempted to impose on commercial shipping rerouted through their territorial waters.

“The Mullahs thought they could hold the world’s economy hostage with a digital cash register and a few naval mines,” Hegseth said. “They were wrong. Our strikes have not only cleared 95% of their naval mines but have also sent 90% of the Iranian Navy to the bottom of the Persian Gulf. There are no more tolls because there is no more Iranian Navy to collect them.”

General Caine added that U.S. Navy Central Command, under Vice Adm. Curt Renshaw, has taken over “maritime security management” in the Strait. The illegal tolls, which had caused global oil prices to skyrocket and war-risk premiums to hit 1% of ship value, have been abolished by force.

The Decimation of the Industrial Base

The core of the morning’s briefing focused on the sheer scale of the physical destruction inside Iran. Secretary Hegseth confirmed that the U.S. and its partners—primarily Israel—have struck over 13,000 targets.

“We finished completely destroying Iran’s defense-industrial base,” Hegseth stated. “They can no longer build missiles. They can no longer build the Shahed drones that have terrorized the region and the world. Their ability to manufacture sophisticated weaponry is gone—razed to the ground.”

The Secretary described the campaign as “devastating and without mercy,” noting that the mission’s goal was to dismantle the “conventional shield” Iran used to protect its nuclear ambitions. “The shield is broken,” Hegseth added, “and if they try to rebuild it, we will be back before the first brick is laid.”

The Lebanon Front: No Ceasefire for Proxies

While the President announced a ceasefire with Tehran, the briefing clarified that the conflict is not over for Iran’s regional proxies. In Lebanon, the IDF and U.S. forces have continued high-intensity strikes against Hezbollah infrastructure.

“Prime Minister Netanyahu has been very clear, and we agree: the ceasefire with the regime in Tehran does not extend to the terrorist armies in Lebanon,” General Caine said.

Reports from earlier this morning indicate massive strikes in the coastal city of Tyre and the Nabatieh region. Israeli warplanes and U.S. stand-off munitions targeted a residential building in Tyre used as a command node, as well as several posts belonging to the Islamic Health Committee, a known front for Hezbollah operations. Over 70 people have been reported killed in Lebanon in the last 48 hours as the “cleanup” phase of Epic Fury targets the remnants of the “Islamic Resistance.”

Non-Kinetic Mastery and the ‘Effects Cell’

General Caine, drawing on his background in both the cockpit and the CIA, pulled back the curtain on the “invisible” side of the war. He detailed the role of the Joint Staff’s non-kinetic effects cell, which worked in tandem with U.S. CYBERCOM and SPACECOM.

“Before a single Tomahawk hit a silo, we had already blinded their eyes,” Caine explained. Digital strikes neutralized Iranian command and control, while classified space assets disrupted their satellite-linked drone guidance systems. This layering of effects allowed U.S. B-2 bombers and F-35s to operate with “total air dominance,” a feat Hegseth noted was accomplished without the “politically correct rules of engagement” that hampered previous administrations.

The Human Cost and the Fallen

Despite the declaration of victory, the briefing remained somber when discussing American casualties. Hegseth and Caine offered their condolences to the families of the four American service members lost in the initial weeks of the campaign.

“We fight to win, but war is hell,” Hegseth said, quoting Psalm 144. He praised the “warriors” who ended “47 years of Iranian belligerence.” The Secretary reiterated that the rebranding of the Department of War was a return to the reality of the American mission: “We are not defenders anymore; we are warriors trained to kill the enemy and break their will.”

What Comes Next?

The two-week ceasefire is a fragile window. The Iranian 10-point proposal includes demands for the lifting of all sanctions and the withdrawal of U.S. forces, points that Hegseth hinted were “non-starters” in their current form.

“The President has given them a chance to survive as a nation,” Hegseth concluded. “But let there be no mistake—the Department of War still has its thumb on the scale. We are ready to resume Epic Fury at a moment’s notice if the Mullahs do anything other than accept the new reality.”

As the briefing ended, the focus shifted to Pakistan, where mediators are working to turn the temporary ceasefire into a permanent surrender. In the meantime, the Strait of Hormuz is open, the “toll booth” is closed, and the smoke continues to rise over the ruins of Iran’s industrial dreams.

 


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