🔗 Share this article Orbital Photographs Reveal Iranian Navy and Atomic Locations Damaged by Joint US and Israeli Airstrikes. A wave of US and Israeli strikes has reportedly eliminated or harmed at least 11 warships belonging to Iran since Saturday, new satellite images demonstrate, with missile bases and enrichment plants also sustaining hits. Images of the southern Konarak naval military port and the Bandar Abbas port facility, which sits on the strategic Hormuz Strait and houses the headquarters of the Iran's naval force, depict plumes of smoke rising from several warships on the start of the week. Naval Assets Sustained Major Damage Included in the targets eliminated was the Makran, Iran's biggest warship which had functioned as a unmanned aerial vehicle platform. Satellite images showed thick smoke pouring from the ship which had been moored at the Bandar Abbas naval base. Analytical evaluations suggest that no fewer than a quintet of warships at Bandar Abbas were "damaged or eliminated". Imagery of the south end of the harbor depict smoke emanating from the Makran, while another pair of ships appear to be impacted, with a single one clearly on fire. Over at Konarak, images reveal several stricken ships, with intelligence reports pointing to damage to six ships. Pictures taken on Monday also show that several facilities at the base have been destroyed. "For a long time the Iran's leadership has threatened global maritime traffic," an American commander stated. "Now, there is not a single Iranian vessel at sea in the Arabian Gulf, Hormuz Strait or Gulf of Oman, and we will not stop." Some vessels reportedly sunk may have been hidden in satellite images by cloud or smoke, or hit in open waters, and have not been conclusively proven. Additional information stated that one Iranian ship was sinking near Sri Lanka's waters, prompting a search and rescue mission. Rocket Bases and Atomic Facilities Attacked The destruction of Iranian missile bases and the stopping atomic bomb programs were listed as other aims of the military strikes. Aerial imagery also showed strikes on the southerly Khorgu base and north-western Tabriz missile missile bases, and at the Konarak air air base, where weapons bunkers and bunkers were hit. Over at the Choqa Balk-e drone drone base to the west of the city of Kermanshah, significant damage was seen to warehouses, bunkers and drone launch equipment. Destruction was also seen at a surveillance station at the Zahedan military airport in eastern parts of the country, close to the border with Afghanistan and Pakistan. Of particular note, the new round of strikes have reportedly hit sites at Natanz – considered at the center of Iran's enrichment efforts. An international watchdog said that the affected buildings were used for access to the site's underground enrichment facility and that "no nuclear fallout" was expected. Broader Fallout and Assessment Defense experts indicated that the offensive appeared to have "greatly reduced" the Iran's naval capacity to sustain traditional warfare using its biggest warships. Nevertheless, it was emphasised that Tehran retains the capacity to launch unconventional attacks at sea through the use of drones, small submarines and its so-called "clandestine network" of oil ships. The overall extent of the damage caused to Iranian military infrastructure has yet to be fully assessed, with strikes said to be ongoing. Photos also shows extensive destruction to the headquarters of the Iran's Revolutionary Guards in the capital Tehran. A large number of non-military structures also appear to have been hit in the capital city and throughout Iran since the hostilities began. Reports of deaths from ground sources state that many hundreds of civilians may have been killed in the bombardment. With the conflict ongoing, review of satellite imagery will persist to assess the unfolding battlefield picture.