April 4, 2026

The Pentagon has added Operation Epic Fury to its casualty database, as of April 3 showing 365 U.S. troops wounded in action and 13 killed.

The update marks the first time the Department of Defense has publicly included Operation Epic Fury in its official casualty tracking system, offering the clearest snapshot yet of the human toll tied to the operation. The figures provide new insight into how the military is tracking wounded and killed troops as the conflict unfolds.

The update follows weeks of rising casualty reports tied to the operation. On Friday and into Saturday, a search remained ongoing for one of two F-15E crew members taken down in Iran. U.S. officials said March 1 that three service members had been killed and five seriously wounded. By March 2, the number of those killed had risen to six.

Reporting later in March put the death toll at 13 and the number of wounded near 300, highlighting a steady increase as the operation expanded.

Military.com sought clarification on how the Pentagon defines those killed in action, died of wounds, or non-hostile deaths. A Defense Department duty officer directed questions to U.S. Central Command.

The newly released data shows the U.S. Army accounts for the largest share of troops wounded in action in Operation Epic Fury, with 247 of the 365 total casualties.

The Pentagon has finally pulled back the curtain on Operation Epic Fury’s grim toll, revealing a staggering 365 U.S. troops wounded and 13 killed in action as of April 3—numbers that underscore the brutal reality behind the headlines. After weeks of rising casualty reports and desperate rescue missions, including the harrowing search for downed F-15E crew members in Iran, the latest data confirms the U.S. Army has borne the brunt with 247 wounded soldiers. This unprecedented public admission from the Department of Defense offers a stark, sobering glimpse of the mounting human cost as the operation intensifies, shattering any illusions of a swift, clean campaign.

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