Orbital Pictures Indicate Iran's Navy and Nuclear Locations Struck by American and Israeli Attacks.

Multiple American and Israeli attacks has allegedly eliminated or harmed a minimum of 11 Iranian naval vessels starting Saturday, freshly analyzed aerial photos reveal, with missile bases and atomic facilities also coming under fire.

Pictures of the southerly Konarak naval military port and the Bandar Abbas installation, which sits on the strategic Hormuz Strait and contains the headquarters of the Iran's naval force, depict smoke billowing from a number of ships on recent days.

Naval Fleet Incurred Significant Losses

Included in the ships sunk was the IRINS Makran, Iran's biggest warship which had been used as a drone carrier. Satellite images showed dark plumes pouring from the vessel which had been moored at the Bandar Abbas naval base.

Intelligence reports indicate that no fewer than five ships at the port were "struck or destroyed". Pictures of the southern end of the harbor depict smoke emanating from the Makran, while additional ships seem to be damaged, with one of them clearly on fire.

At Konarak, photos display several stricken ships, with analysis identifying damage to a half-dozen warships. Images taken on Monday also indicate that several structures at the base have been leveled.

"For a long time the Tehran government has harassed commercial vessels," a senior US military official declared. "Now, there is not one vessel from Iran at sea in the Arabian Gulf, Hormuz Strait or Sea of Oman, and we will continue."

Some ships reportedly destroyed may have been obscured in satellite images by haze or plumes, or struck at sea, and have not been conclusively proven. Separate reports stated that an Iranian vessel was sinking off the coast of Sri Lankan territorial waters, resulting in a search and rescue mission.

Rocket Sites and Nuclear Locations Hit

Eliminating Iranian missile bases and the prevention of enrichment activities were stated as other objectives of the offensive. Aerial imagery also revealed impacts against the southerly Khorgu base and northwestern Tabriz missile facilities, and at the Konarak air air base, where weapons bunkers and bunkers were struck.

Over at the Choqa Balk-e drone unmanned aircraft site west of the city of Kermanshah, significant damage was identified to warehouses, underground facilities and unmanned aircraft systems.

Impact was also noted at a surveillance station at the Zahedan airbase airbase in eastern Iran, near the frontier with Afghanistan and Pakistan.

Perhaps most notably, the latest wave of strikes have reportedly targeted sites at Natanz – long said to be at the core of the country's atomic program. A global monitoring agency said that the affected structures were used for entry to the site's below-ground enrichment facility and that "no radiological consequence" was anticipated.

Wider Impact and Assessment

Military analysts suggested that the attacks appeared to have "largely neutralized" the Iran's naval ability to sustain standard operations using its biggest warships. But, it was stressed that Iran maintains the option to launch irregular strikes at sea through the use of unmanned aerial vehicles, midget subs and its so-called "shadow fleet" of oil ships.

The total scope of the damage caused to Iran's defense infrastructure has yet to be fully assessed, with strikes reportedly ongoing. Imagery also shows considerable damage to the headquarters of the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) in the capital Tehran.

A significant number of non-military structures also seem to have been hit in the capital city and throughout the country since the conflict started. Casualty figures from ground sources indicate that many hundreds of civilians may have been killed in the bombardment.

As the situation develops, analysis of space-based data will persist to document the changing battlefield picture.

Janice White
Janice White

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