Aerial Imagery Depict Iranian Naval Forces and Nuclear Locations Damaged by American and Israeli Attacks.
Multiple US and Israeli strikes has allegedly eliminated or harmed no fewer than 11 warships belonging to Iran starting Saturday, freshly analyzed orbital imagery demonstrate, with rocket sites and atomic facilities also coming under fire.
Photographs of the southern Konarak naval naval base and the Bandar Abbas facility, which sits on the strategic Hormuz Strait and contains the main command of the Iran's naval force, show black smoke pouring from multiple warships on the start of the week.
Naval Fleet Incurred Significant Losses
Among the targets eliminated was the IRINS Makran, Iran's largest naval vessel which had been used as a drone carrier. Aerial imagery indicated black smoke emanating from the ship which had been moored at the Bandar Abbas base.
Analytical evaluations suggest that at least five vessels at the port were "hit or sunk". Pictures of the southern part of the harbor show smoke rising from the IRINS Makran, while two other vessels are visibly impacted, with one visibly ablaze.
At Konarak, photos display numerous damaged vessels, with intelligence reports pointing to impacts on a half-dozen warships. Pictures from Monday also demonstrate that a number of facilities at the base have been leveled.
"For many years the Iran's leadership has disrupted global maritime traffic," a senior US military official declared. "Today, there is not a single Iranian vessel at sea in the Persian Gulf, Hormuz Strait or Gulf of Oman, and we will not stop."
Some ships reportedly sunk may have been obscured in satellite images by weather conditions or battle damage, or struck at sea, and have yet to be fully confirmed. Separate reports suggested that a ship from Iran was going down near Sri Lankan territorial waters, prompting a rescue operation.
Missile Sites and Nuclear Locations Attacked
The destruction of Tehran's launch facilities and the hindering of atomic bomb programs were listed as further objectives of the offensive. Satellite images also depicted impacts against the southerly Khorgu and north-western Tabriz missile bases, and at the Konarak air base, where rocket warehouses and fortifications were hit.
Over at the Choqa Balk-e drone UAV facility to the west of the city of Kermanshah, extensive damage was observed to storage buildings, bunkers and drone launch equipment.
Destruction was also observed at a radar installation at the Zahedan airbase in eastern Iran, close to the frontier with neighboring nations.
Perhaps most notably, the latest wave of strikes have apparently hit sites at Natanz – considered at the core of Iran's nuclear programme. An international watchdog said that the damaged buildings were used for entry to the site's below-ground nuclear plant and that "no release of radioactive material" was likely.
Broader Fallout and Assessment
Military analysts suggested that the attacks appeared to have "largely neutralized" the Iran's naval ability to sustain standard operations using its largest vessels. However, it was noted that Iran maintains the option to launch irregular strikes at sea through the use of drones, midget subs and its so-called "clandestine network" of oil ships.
The full scope of the destruction caused to Iranian military facilities remains unclear, with hostilities said to be ongoing. Pictures also reveals considerable destruction to the command center of the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) in the capital Tehran.
A significant number of non-military structures also appear to have been damaged in the capital city and across Iran after the conflict started. Casualty figures from ground sources suggest that many hundreds of civilians may have been fatally injured in the attacks.
As the situation develops, review of satellite imagery will continue to assess the unfolding military landscape.