In a bold display of strategic reach, the U.S. Air Force has deployed B-2 Spirit stealth bombers from Whiteman Air Force Base in Missouri, accompanied by eight KC-135 Stratotankers, reportedly en route to Diego Garcia, the U.S. military’s key base in the Indian Ocean.

Flight tracking data shows two formations of four tankers each rendezvousing with the B-2s over Kansas. The bombers used the callsign “MYTEE21,” historically associated with long-range stealth operations. While the Pentagon has not formally confirmed the mission’s target, the move comes amid increasing military buildup across the Middle East and Europe.
This deployment is part of a larger repositioning of U.S. military power, which includes the mobilization of fighters, aerial surveillance assets, and the presence of two U.S. Navy supercarriers in regional waters. The involvement of eight refueling tankers underscores an extended-range strategic operation with high-value capability.

At the heart of the deployment lies the B-2 Spirit bomber—one of America’s most advanced platforms for penetrating dense air defense networks. It is the only aircraft in the U.S. arsenal specifically designed to deliver strikes against hardened, deeply buried targets such as Iran’s Fordow nuclear facility.
The B-2’s stealth architecture allows it to operate undetected in heavily contested airspace. Capable of flying over 6,000 nautical miles without refueling and carrying 40,000 pounds of internal ordnance, the bomber is optimized for both conventional and nuclear missions.
Critically, the B-2 is one of the few aircraft capable of deploying the GBU-57 Massive Ordnance Penetrator (MOP)—a 30,000-pound precision-guided bomb designed to destroy fortified underground structures. The MOP can punch through 60 meters of concrete, giving the U.S. a unique capability to neutralize targets like Iran’s subterranean Fordow uranium enrichment complex.
While the U.S. Department of Defense maintains that there is no imminent strike planned, the timing and scale of this B-2 deployment may serve both as a deterrent and a signal: should diplomacy fail, military options remain ready.