Aerial Images Depict Iran's Naval Forces and Nuclear Locations Struck by American and Israeli Attacks.

Multiple joint strikes has according to analysis destroyed or damaged at least 11 Iranian naval vessels since Saturday, new satellite images show, with launch facilities and atomic facilities also being targeted.

Photographs of the southerly Konarak naval military port and the Bandar Abbas port installation, which overlooks the strategic Hormuz Strait and contains the headquarters of the Iranian navy, depict plumes of smoke rising from a number of warships on the start of the week.

Naval Forces Sustained Significant Damage

Among the targets eliminated was the IRINS Makran, Iran's largest naval vessel which had been used as a drone carrier. Orbital photos displayed thick smoke rising from the vessel which had been stationed at the Bandar Abbas base.

Analytical evaluations state that at least a quintet of warships at Bandar Abbas were "struck or destroyed". Photos of the southern part of the port reveal smoke emanating from the IRINS Makran, while additional vessels seem to be damaged, with a single one clearly on fire.

At Konarak, photos reveal several harmed ships, with intelligence reports identifying strikes against six ships. Photos from Monday also demonstrate that several facilities at the base have been destroyed.

"For a long time the Iranian regime has disrupted commercial vessels," an American commander stated. "Today, there is not a single Iranian ship underway in the Persian Gulf, Hormuz Strait or Sea of Oman, and we will persist."

Some vessels reportedly destroyed may have been obscured in satellite images by cloud or smoke, or hit in open waters, and have yet to be fully confirmed. Other accounts suggested that an Iranian vessel was sinking near Sri Lanka's waters, prompting a rescue operation.

Rocket Bases and Nuclear Locations Attacked

Eliminating Tehran's launch facilities and the stopping enrichment activities were declared as further goals of the air campaign. Aerial imagery also revealed impacts against the southern Khorgu and north-western Tabriz missile facilities, and at the Konarak base, where rocket warehouses and bunkers were hit.

At the Choqa Balk-e drone UAV facility to the west of the city of Kermanshah, extensive damage was identified to warehouses, underground facilities and unmanned aircraft systems.

Damage was also observed at a surveillance station at the Zahedan airbase airbase in eastern Iran, near the frontier with neighboring nations.

Perhaps most notably, the latest wave of strikes have apparently targeted installations at the Natanz complex – considered at the heart of the country's enrichment efforts. The UN's atomic energy body stated that the affected structures were used for access to the site's underground enrichment facility and that "no nuclear fallout" was expected.

Broader Consequences and Analysis

Military analysts suggested that the attacks appeared to have "largely neutralized" the Iranian navy's capacity to sustain traditional warfare using its biggest vessels. But, it was stressed that Iran still has the capacity to launch unconventional attacks at sea through the use of unmanned aerial vehicles, mini-submarines and its so-called "ghost fleet" of oil ships.

The full scope of the damage caused to Iran's defense infrastructure has yet to be fully assessed, with hostilities said to be ongoing. Photos also shows widespread damage to the command center of the the IRGC in the city of Tehran.

Numerous of civilian buildings also appear to have been damaged in the capital city and throughout the country since the fighting escalated. Casualty figures from inside Iran state that many hundreds of civilians may have been lost their lives in the strikes.

As the situation develops, monitoring of satellite imagery will persist to document the changing military landscape.

Michael Bernard
Michael Bernard

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