Orbital Images Depict Iran's Navy and Nuclear Facilities Targeted by Joint US and Israeli Attacks.

A wave of joint attacks has reportedly destroyed or damaged at least eleven warships belonging to Iran since Saturday, freshly analyzed aerial photos demonstrate, with launch facilities and nuclear sites also sustaining hits.

Pictures of the southern Konarak naval naval base and the Bandar Abbas facility, which overlooks the strategic Hormuz Strait and houses the headquarters of the Iran's naval force, depict plumes of smoke rising from multiple warships on recent days.

Naval Forces Incurred Substantial Damage

Among the targets eliminated was the Makran, Iran's biggest warship which had been used as a drone carrier. Aerial imagery indicated thick smoke emanating from the ship which had been docked at the Bandar Abbas base.

Intelligence evaluations indicate that at least five vessels at Bandar Abbas were "hit or sunk". Imagery of the south end of the port show plumes ascending from the Makran, while additional vessels seem to be damaged, with one clearly on fire.

Over at Konarak, photos display multiple harmed vessels, with analysis pointing to impacts on six vessels. Pictures from the start of the week also show that a number of buildings at the installation have been leveled.

"For a long time the Tehran government has disrupted international shipping," a senior US military official stated. "Now, there is no vessel from Iran underway in the Arabian Gulf, Strait of Hormuz or Gulf of Oman, and we will not stop."

Some vessels allegedly sunk may have been hidden in satellite images by cloud or smoke, or struck at sea, and have not been independently verified. Separate reports indicated that a ship from Iran was foundering off the coast of Sri Lankan territorial waters, prompting a rescue operation.

Rocket Installations and Atomic Facilities Attacked

Neutralizing Iran's rocket sites and the hindering of atomic bomb programs were stated as further aims of the offensive. Satellite images also showed strikes on the southern Khorgu and north-western Tabriz missile bases, and at the Konarak air air base, where weapons bunkers and fortifications were hit.

At the Choqa Balk-e UAV facility to the west of the city of Kermanshah, significant destruction was observed to sheds, underground facilities and UAV launching apparatus.

Impact was also seen at a radar installation at the Zahedan airbase in eastern parts of the country, near the border with Afghanistan and Pakistan.

Of particular note, the latest wave of strikes have reportedly focused on sites at Natanz – considered at the center of the country's enrichment efforts. A global monitoring agency said that the damaged structures were used for access to the site's underground nuclear plant and that "no nuclear fallout" was anticipated.

Broader Fallout and Assessment

Military analysts suggested that the attacks appeared to have "largely neutralized" the Iran's naval capacity to carry out traditional warfare using its biggest warships. However, it was stressed that Iran maintains the option to launch asymmetric warfare at sea through the use of drones, mini-submarines and its so-called "clandestine network" of tankers.

The total extent of the destruction caused to Iran's defense infrastructure remains unclear, with strikes reportedly persisting. Photos also shows considerable damage to the command center of the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) in the capital Tehran.

Numerous of public facilities also appear to have been hit in the capital city and across the country after the conflict started. Reports of deaths from local officials state that many hundreds of non-combatants may have been fatally injured in the bombardment.

As the situation develops, analysis of satellite imagery will continue to track the unfolding military landscape.

Tina Scott
Tina Scott

Elena Voss is a business strategist with over 15 years of experience in global consulting, specializing in digital transformation and market expansion.