Aerial Photographs Show Iranian Naval Forces and Nuclear Locations Damaged by US-Israeli Airstrikes.

A series of US and Israeli attacks has allegedly eliminated or harmed at least eleven Iran's navy ships since Saturday, freshly analyzed satellite images demonstrate, with missile bases and enrichment plants also coming under fire.

Images of the southerly Konarak military port and the Bandar Abbas port installation, which is located on the Strait of Hormuz and houses the headquarters of the Iranian navy, show plumes of smoke rising from several vessels on Monday and Tuesday.

Naval Assets Sustained Significant Damage

Among the vessels destroyed was the IRINS Makran, Iran's most sizable ship which had functioned as a drone carrier. Satellite images indicated thick smoke rising from the vessel which had been moored at the Bandar Abbas naval base.

Analytical reports suggest that at least five vessels at the port were "hit or sunk". Imagery of the southern part of the port reveal plumes ascending from the IRINS Makran, while two other ships are visibly impacted, with one clearly on fire.

Over at the Konarak base, images show numerous stricken vessels, with intelligence reports pointing to impacts on six ships. Photos from Monday also demonstrate that multiple structures at the installation have been demolished.

"For decades the Iran's leadership has disrupted international shipping," a senior US military official stated. "Now, there is no Iranian vessel underway in the Persian Gulf, Strait of Hormuz or Sea of Oman, and we will persist."

A number of ships allegedly destroyed may have been concealed in aerial photos by cloud or smoke, or hit in open waters, and have yet to be fully confirmed. Other accounts indicated that one Iranian ship was going down near Sri Lanka's waters, resulting in a search and rescue mission.

Rocket Sites and Atomic Locations Attacked

Neutralizing Iran's rocket sites and the hindering of enrichment activities were declared as additional objectives of the air campaign. Aerial imagery also depicted damage at the southern Khorgu base and north-western Tabriz facilities, and at the Konarak base, where missile storage facilities and bunkers were targeted.

At the Choqa Balk-e drone UAV facility to the west of Kermanshah, significant damage was seen to sheds, bunkers and unmanned aircraft systems.

Impact was also observed at a radar installation at the Zahedan military airport in eastern Iran, close to the border with Afghanistan and Pakistan.

Of particular note, the most recent series of attacks have apparently hit installations at Natanz – considered at the center of Iran's atomic program. A global monitoring agency said that the affected structures were used for entry to the facility's below-ground nuclear plant and that "no radiological consequence" was expected.

Broader Consequences and Assessment

Defense experts indicated that the offensive appeared to have "largely neutralized" the Iran's naval capacity to sustain conventional attacks using its biggest vessels. However, it was emphasised that Iran maintains the option to launch unconventional attacks at sea through the use of drones, mini-submarines and its so-called "ghost fleet" of tankers.

The full scope of the destruction caused to Iranian military facilities has yet to be fully assessed, with strikes reportedly persisting. Photos also reveals extensive damage to the headquarters of the the IRGC in the city of Tehran.

A significant number of public facilities also are reported to have been hit in the capital city and across Iran since the fighting escalated. Reports of deaths from ground sources suggest that a high number of non-combatants may have been fatally injured in the attacks.

Amid continuing hostilities, review of space-based data will continue to track the evolving scope of damage.

Mary Gaines
Mary Gaines

A seasoned gambling analyst with over a decade of experience in casino gaming and slot machine reviews.