🔗 Share this article Orbital Images Depict Iranian Navy and Atomic Sites Struck by Joint US and Israeli Strikes. Multiple joint attacks has allegedly eliminated or harmed a minimum of eleven Iran's navy ships since Saturday, new orbital imagery demonstrate, with rocket sites and nuclear sites also coming under fire. Pictures of the southern Konarak military port and the Bandar Abbas port facility, which overlooks the Strait of Hormuz and is home to the headquarters of the Iran's naval force, reveal plumes of smoke rising from a number of vessels on recent days. Naval Forces Incurred Major Damage Among the targets eliminated was the Makran, Iran's largest naval vessel which had served as a drone carrier. Orbital photos displayed dark plumes emanating from the ship which had been docked at the Bandar Abbas naval base. Intelligence assessments suggest that at least five ships at Bandar Abbas were "struck or destroyed". Imagery of the south end of the harbor show smoke rising from the IRINS Makran, while another pair of ships seem to be impacted, with one seen burning. Over at the Konarak base, images show multiple stricken ships, with intelligence reports pointing to impacts on six vessels. Pictures taken on Monday also demonstrate that a number of structures at the installation have been leveled. "For many years the Iranian regime has disrupted global maritime traffic," an American commander stated. "Today, there is no Iranian ship at sea in the Arabian Gulf, Hormuz Strait or Sea of Oman, and we will not stop." A number of ships reportedly sunk may have been concealed in satellite images by haze or plumes, or hit in open waters, and have not been conclusively proven. Separate reports stated that a ship from Iran was sinking near Sri Lanka's territorial waters, prompting a rescue operation. Missile Installations and Nuclear Locations Attacked Neutralizing Iranian missile bases and the stopping enrichment activities were declared as further goals of the military strikes. Satellite images also showed impacts against the southern Khorgu and northwestern Tabriz missile facilities, and at the Konarak air air base, where missile storage facilities and bunkers were struck. At the Choqa Balk-e drone base west of Kermanshah, extensive destruction was observed to warehouses, underground facilities and unmanned aircraft systems. Impact was also seen at a surveillance station at the Zahedan airbase military airport in eastern parts of the country, near the border with Afghanistan and Pakistan. Of particular note, the new round of strikes have reportedly focused on installations at Natanz – long said to be at the center of the country'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 anticipated. Broader Fallout and Analysis Military analysts indicated that the attacks appeared to have "significantly degraded" the Iranian navy's capability to sustain traditional warfare using its most significant warships. But, it was emphasised that Tehran retains the capacity to launch asymmetric warfare at sea through the use of unmanned aerial vehicles, small submarines and its so-called "shadow fleet" of oil ships. The total scope of the damage caused to Iranian military infrastructure remains unclear, with hostilities said to be ongoing. Pictures also indicates considerable destruction to the command center of the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) in the city of Tehran. A significant number of public facilities also are reported to have been struck in the capital and across the country since the conflict began. Reports of deaths from local officials suggest that many hundreds of non-combatants may have been lost their lives in the strikes. With the conflict ongoing, monitoring of aerial photographs will carry on to track the unfolding battlefield picture.