The six-week ceasefire between Iran and the US, which began in April, has remained fragile with President Donald Trump threatening to renew the strikes as the Islamic Republic has reportedly restarted production of some of its drones, and the Iranian military is rapidly rebuilding certain military capabilities.

Earlier this week, Trump said that he was hours away from ordering renewed strikes on Iran and that American war planes had reportedly advanced, targets were identified, but the Republican leader abruptly paused the move, citing requests from Gulf allies.

Rapid military reconstitution defies US estimates

A CNN report, citing sources aware of the US intelligence assessments, suggested that Iran’s military is reconstituting at a faster pace than earlier estimated by the American agencies.

The rebuilding of Iran’s military capabilities, which were destroyed in the recent joint attack by the US-Israel, which includes replacing launchers and missile sites, indicates that Tehran still remains a threat to President Trump’s regional allies, the report stated.

The US intelligence assessment also potentially questions the claims made by the Trump administration, wherein it was said that US-Israeli strikes have deteriorated Iran’s military capabilities in the long term.

Ceasefire

6 weeks

Launchers survived

~66%

Drones intact

~50%

Drone rebuild ETA

6 months

Missile Launchers

Up from ~50% in April

Intact

~66%

Drone Arsenal

Thousands of UAVs operational

Intact

~50%

Coastal Cruise Missiles

Strait of Hormuz threat

Intact

High

Drone Production

Restarted during ceasefire

Rapid Rebuild

6 mo

Ballistic Missile Production

Hit hardest by US strikes

Degraded

Low

Defense Industrial Base

CENTCOM vs Intel split

Disputed

10–90%

CENTCOM Position

Adm. Brad Cooper · House Armed Services Cmte, Tuesday

“Operation Epic Fury significantly degraded Iran’s ballistic missiles and drones while destroying 90% of their defense industrial base.”

“Cannot reconstitute for years”

— Cooper testimony

US Intelligence Assessment

4 sources familiar with US intel · told CNN

“The Iranians have exceeded all timelines the IC had for reconstitution.”

“Months, not years”

— US official to CNN

Why it matters Two sources told CNN the intelligence is inconsistent with CENTCOM’s public testimony. Some of Iran’s defense industrial base remains intact — which could further accelerate the timeline for reconstituting certain capabilities.

Claim

Benjamin Netanyahu (CBS)

“China is giving Iran components of missile manufacturing.” Declined to elaborate further.

Denial

Guo Jiakun (China FM)

Allegation is “not based on facts” — press conference response.

What US intel says

China has continued to supply Iran with missile components during the conflict, two sources familiar with assessments told CNN. Supply has likely been curtailed by the ongoing US blockade. Russia and China together cited as factors enabling Iran’s faster-than-expected rebuild.

Trump said Tuesday he was “one hour from restarting bombing” — meaning these rebuilt capabilities could come into play if hostilities resume.

Source: CNN intelligence reporting (4 sources) · Adm. Brad Cooper, House Armed Services Committee testimony · Netanyahu (CBS) · Chinese FM briefing · Pentagon spokesman Sean Parnell statement · Data as of May 21, 2026. Figures are US intelligence estimates; some launchers may be inaccessible/buried but not destroyed.

Timelines and the impact of the ceasefire

A US official told CNN that Iran will be able to reconstitute its drone attack capabilities in six months, as the time to restart production of various military components differs. “The Iranians have exceeded all timelines the IC had for reconstitution,” the official added.

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The report added that Iran has been able to recover quicker than expected due to several factors, including support it received from China and Russia and that the US and Israel paused their strikes for a ceasefire, which may have restricted the extensive infliction on Iranian infrastructure.

Allegations of foreign support and Chinese denial

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu had last week claimed that China is providing Iran “components of missile manufacturing” but refrained from detailing it further, CBS News reported.

However, Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesperson Guo Jiakun denied the allegations and said it was “not based on facts.”