🔗 Share this article Satellite Pictures Depict Iran's Navy and Nuclear Facilities Struck by American and Israeli Military Action. A wave of US and Israeli attacks has reportedly eliminated or harmed at least 11 Iran's navy ships since the weekend, recently obtained orbital imagery demonstrate, with rocket sites and enrichment plants also coming under fire. Images of the southern Konarak naval military port and the Bandar Abbas port facility, which sits on the strategic Hormuz Strait and is home to the main command of the Iranian navy, reveal plumes of smoke rising from multiple warships on recent days. Naval Assets Sustained Significant Damage Included in the ships sunk was the Makran, the country's most sizable ship which had served as a unmanned aerial vehicle platform. Orbital photos displayed thick smoke pouring from the vessel which had been moored at the Bandar Abbas base. Intelligence reports state that at least a quintet of warships at the port were "hit or sunk". Photos of the southern end of the port show plumes ascending from the Makran, while additional ships are visibly impacted, with a single one clearly on fire. At Konarak, photos reveal numerous harmed vessels, with analysis identifying strikes against six vessels. Images from the start of the week also demonstrate that several structures at the installation have been demolished. "For many years the Tehran government has disrupted commercial vessels," an American commander stated. "Today, there is not one Iranian ship operational in the Arabian Gulf, Hormuz Strait or Sea of Oman, and we will not stop." Some ships allegedly destroyed may have been hidden in aerial photos by cloud or smoke, or targeted offshore, and have yet to be fully confirmed. Separate reports suggested that an Iranian vessel was foundering off the coast of Sri Lanka's waters, leading to a rescue operation. Rocket Bases and Nuclear Locations Attacked Eliminating Iran's rocket sites and the prevention of enrichment activities were stated as additional goals of the air campaign. Satellite images also depicted damage at the southerly Khorgu base and northwestern Tabriz facilities, and at the Konarak air air base, where weapons bunkers and bunkers were hit. At the Choqa Balk-e drone unmanned aircraft site west of the city of Kermanshah, widespread destruction was identified to sheds, underground facilities and drone launch equipment. Destruction was also noted at a surveillance station at the Zahedan airbase airbase in eastern parts of the country, near the frontier with neighboring nations. Significantly, the latest wave of strikes have apparently hit sites at the Natanz complex – widely believed to be at the center of Iran's atomic program. An international watchdog commented that the affected buildings were used for access to the facility's below-ground nuclear plant and that "no nuclear fallout" was expected. Wider Fallout and Analysis Military analysts stated that the attacks appeared to have "largely neutralized" the Iran's naval capacity to carry out standard operations using its most significant vessels. Nevertheless, it was noted that Tehran retains the ability to launch asymmetric warfare at sea through the use of unmanned aerial vehicles, mini-submarines and its so-called "clandestine network" of tankers. The overall extent of the destruction caused to Iran's defense facilities has yet to be fully assessed, with hostilities said to be persisting. Photos also reveals extensive destruction to the command center of the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) in the city of Tehran. A significant number of public facilities also appear to have been struck in the capital and throughout the country after the fighting began. Reports of deaths from inside Iran indicate that hundreds of civilians may have been killed in the bombardment. With the conflict ongoing, analysis of satellite imagery will continue to track the changing military landscape.