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Home » Deep Dive: w/ Steve Jermy – What Trump’s ‘Massive Armada’ to Iran Can Do (Transcript)

Deep Dive: w/ Steve Jermy – What Trump’s ‘Massive Armada’ to Iran Can Do (Transcript)

Editor’s Note: In this episode of Deep Dive, Lt Col Daniel Davis and retired Commodore Steve Jermy provide a sobering expert analysis of the military capabilities and strategic risks surrounding the “massive armada” signaled toward Iran. The discussion highlights critical limitations of a single carrier strike group, noting that while powerful, such a force may only sustain a strategic bombardment for a few days before facing significant replenishment and fatigue challenges. Beyond the immediate firepower, the experts explore the potential for devastating Iranian counter-responses, such as the blocking of the Straits of Hormuz, and warn of the dangerous lack of a clear war termination strategy. This analysis ultimately urges a realistic assessment of the regional and global consequences of an escalation, questioning whether the U.S. currently has attainable military objectives. (Jan 30, 2026)

TRANSCRIPT:

VIDEO CLIP BEGINS:

TRUMP: And by the way, there’s another beautiful armada floating beautifully toward Iran right now. So we’ll see. I hope, I hope they make a deal. I hope they make a deal. They should have made a deal the first time that have a country…

VIDEO CLIP ENDS:

Trump’s Warning and the Armada

DANIEL DAVIS: That was President Trump just three days ago warning about this big armada that was heading towards Iran. It is now on station and everybody’s kind of holding their breath wondering what’s going to happen next. And we are going to try and figure out what may happen next or at least the range of possibilities here.

We are delighted today to have Commodore Steve Jermy, retired commodore from the UK, from the Royal Navy, who has combat experience, naval combat experience and a lot of other experience throughout his career in the naval aviation stuff. So all those things are going to come into play here if conflict breaks out between the United States and Iran. And I couldn’t think of anybody better to have this conversation with. So, Steve, welcome to the show.

STEVE JERMY: Yeah, great to be back, Danny. I’d love to have been a US Navy guy operating for American carriers, but ours were a bit smaller than yours. So it would have been fun, but…

DANIEL DAVIS: You had the advantage of us. I can’t remember, I think the last naval engagement that we had was like during the Vietnam War or something. So you got a leg up on all of my compatriots in the Navy. So I’m really interested in hearing some of the things you have to say here.

But just kind of to set the stage, here’s what President Trump has said in his Truth Social, which we kind of thought was basically saying, all right, it’s game on and it’s just now a matter of when I’m going to pull the trigger.

He wrote that a massive armada is heading to Iran. It’s moving quickly with great power, enthusiasm and purpose. It is a larger fleet headed by the great aircraft carrier Abraham Lincoln than that sent to Venezuela. Like with Venezuela, it is ready, willing and able to rapidly fulfill its mission with speed and violence if necessary.

Hopefully, Iran will quickly come to the table and negotiate a fair and equitable deal, no nuclear weapons, one that is good for all parties. Time is running out. That’s the key there. Time is running out, he said. It is truly of essence, as I told Iran once before, make a deal.

And then he says, they didn’t. And there was Operation Midnight Hammer. And we will talk a little bit about what that was. A major destruction of Iran. The next attack will be far worse. Don’t make that happen again. And then the weird “thank you for your attention to this matter.” And then he identifies himself on his own post. President Donald J. Trump.

Lessons from Operation Midnight Hammer

Let’s look first of all, and before we even get to what may happen next, what did happen last time with Operation Midnight Hammer. Are there any lessons that we can draw from that, Steve, about what we might can expect here?

STEVE JERMY: I think the interesting lessons, Danny, was as far as we know, that no American aircraft actually penetrated into Iranian airspace. And I suspect that was because they’re extremely cautious, same with the Israelis, extremely cautious about both the S-300 and S-400 missile suites that were there and unwilling to lose aircraft over Iran.

I think the other key thing is that it had all the look of a presentational attack, if you like, where the Americans had a tacit agreement with the Iranians that they would make an attack, but there wouldn’t be too much of it. The Iranians would respond, I think they responded against one of the UAE air bases, but again with forewarning. And so as a result, there was not a huge amount of impact, although there was a lot of noise about it politically.

So to me it felt very much like a presentation attack. Of course, it was presented as a destruction of the nuclear facilities. So it’s curious that people seem to think that we should now be going back to something where we were promised that it had been obliterated. But I don’t think it was obliterated. And I think Ted Postol has talked very convincingly about the unlikelihood of that.

Iran’s Defensive Posture

DANIEL DAVIS: So, yeah, let me ask you something for the moment. Let me put you in the IRGC Navy commander seat for the moment. And you see that. So you know what happened to Midnight Hammer in June of last summer. You see Trump also cited in that same Truth Social, given the example of Venezuela, because we had this big, huge military operation, the most amazing military victory maybe in military history going into Venezuela.

So President Trump says then, and that and Midnight Hammer are cited as your examples that you better be aware because we’re coming in much bigger, he said, in separate communicating this time than the last time.