🔗 Share this article Satellite Images Show Iran's Navy and Nuclear Locations Targeted by American and Israeli Attacks. A wave of joint strikes has allegedly destroyed or damaged a minimum of eleven Iranian naval vessels since Saturday, freshly analyzed satellite images show, with missile bases and nuclear sites also sustaining hits. Images of the southerly Konarak naval naval base and the Bandar Abbas installation, which sits on the Strait of Hormuz and houses the headquarters of the Iran's naval force, reveal plumes of smoke rising from multiple warships on recent days. Naval Assets Incurred Significant Losses Among the vessels destroyed was the Makran, the country's most sizable ship which had been used as a drone carrier. Aerial imagery displayed thick smoke emanating from the vessel which had been stationed at the Bandar Abbas base. Intelligence assessments suggest that at least five vessels at the port were "hit or sunk". Imagery of the southern part of the harbor depict smoke rising from the Makran, while another pair of ships are visibly impacted, with a single one visibly ablaze. At Konarak, photos show numerous damaged ships, with analysis pointing to strikes against a half-dozen warships. Images from Monday also indicate that multiple structures at the installation have been demolished. "For a long time the Iran's leadership has harassed commercial vessels," the head of US Central Command said. "Now, there is not a single Iranian vessel underway in the Arabian Gulf, Hormuz Strait or Sea of Oman, and we will persist." Some vessels allegedly sunk may have been concealed in satellite images by haze or plumes, or targeted offshore, and have not been independently verified. Additional information suggested that a ship from Iran was foundering off the coast of Sri Lankan territorial waters, resulting in a rescue operation. Rocket Installations and Nuclear Locations Targeted Eliminating Iranian missile bases and the prevention of enrichment activities were listed as additional goals of the air campaign. Satellite images also showed impacts against the southerly Khorgu base and north-western Tabriz facilities, and at the Konarak base, where rocket warehouses and fortifications were hit. Over at the Choqa Balk-e UAV facility to the west of Kermanshah, widespread destruction was identified to storage buildings, bunkers and UAV launching apparatus. Destruction was also observed at a surveillance station at the Zahedan airbase airbase in eastern Iran, near the frontier with Afghanistan and Pakistan. Of particular note, the most recent series of strikes have apparently targeted sites at Natanz – widely believed to be at the center of the country's nuclear programme. The UN's atomic energy body stated that the damaged buildings were used for entry to the facility's below-ground enrichment facility and that "no release of radioactive material" was likely. Broader Fallout and Analysis Military analysts indicated that the offensive appeared to have "largely neutralized" the Iranian navy's capability to carry out standard operations using its most significant vessels. But, it was stressed that Iran maintains the capacity to launch unconventional attacks at sea through the use of drones, midget subs and its so-called "shadow fleet" of oil ships. The total scale of the damage caused to Iranian military infrastructure is still uncertain, with strikes said to be persisting. Photos also shows widespread destruction to the main offices of the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) in the city of Tehran. Numerous of non-military structures also seem to have been hit in the capital and across the country since the fighting started. Toll estimates from inside Iran state that hundreds of civilians may have been killed in the strikes. As the situation develops, analysis of space-based data will persist to assess the changing scope of damage.