Aerial Images Reveal Iranian Navy and Atomic Sites Damaged by Joint US and Israeli Attacks.

Multiple American and Israeli attacks has reportedly destroyed or damaged at least eleven Iranian naval vessels since Saturday, freshly analyzed satellite images reveal, with rocket sites and nuclear sites also coming under fire.

Images of the southerly Konarak naval base and the Bandar Abbas port facility, which sits on the Strait of Hormuz and is home to the main command of the Iranian navy, show smoke billowing from multiple vessels on Monday and Tuesday.

Maritime Forces Sustained Substantial Losses

Included in the targets eliminated was the IRINS Makran, Iran's most sizable ship which had served as a drone carrier. Aerial imagery showed dark plumes emanating from the vessel which had been moored at the Bandar Abbas naval base.

Intelligence evaluations indicate that no fewer than five vessels at Bandar Abbas were "damaged or eliminated". Photos of the southern part of the port show plumes ascending from the Makran, while another pair of vessels seem to be impacted, with one of them seen burning.

Over at Konarak, photos reveal several stricken vessels, with intelligence reports pointing to strikes against six ships. Photos taken on the start of the week also demonstrate that several structures at the installation have been demolished.

"For many years the Iranian regime has harassed commercial vessels," a senior US military official said. "Today, there is not one Iranian vessel operational in the Persian Gulf, Strait of Hormuz or Gulf of Oman, and we will persist."

A number of vessels reportedly sunk may have been concealed in aerial photos by haze or plumes, or hit in open waters, and have not been conclusively proven. Additional information indicated that an Iranian vessel was foundering off the coast of Sri Lankan territorial waters, leading to a rescue operation.

Missile Sites and Atomic Locations Hit

The destruction of Iranian missile bases and the prevention of nuclear weapons development were listed as further goals of the air campaign. Aerial imagery also depicted impacts against the southerly Khorgu and northwestern Tabriz facilities, and at the Konarak base, where weapons bunkers and bunkers were struck.

At the Choqa Balk-e drone base to the west of the city of Kermanshah, extensive damage was observed to warehouses, bunkers and unmanned aircraft systems.

Damage was also observed at a radar installation at the Zahedan military airport in eastern parts of the country, near the frontier with neighboring nations.

Perhaps most notably, the latest wave of strikes have apparently targeted facilities at the Natanz complex – considered at the center of Iran's nuclear programme. A global monitoring agency stated that the affected buildings were used for access to the site's underground enrichment facility and that "no nuclear fallout" was expected.

Broader Consequences and Assessment

Defense experts indicated that the attacks appeared to have "largely neutralized" the Iran's naval capability to conduct traditional warfare using its most significant warships. Nevertheless, it was emphasised that Iran still has the ability to launch unconventional attacks at sea through the use of drones, mini-submarines and its so-called "clandestine network" of tankers.

The overall extent of the damage caused to Iran's defense infrastructure has yet to be fully assessed, with hostilities reportedly persisting. Photos also shows widespread destruction to the main offices of the the IRGC in the capital Tehran.

Numerous of civilian buildings also appear to have been hit in the capital and across the country after the fighting began. Reports of deaths from local officials indicate that a high number of non-combatants may have been killed in the bombardment.

With the conflict ongoing, analysis of satellite imagery will carry on to document the evolving scope of damage.

Jonathan Dominguez MD
Jonathan Dominguez MD

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