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Satellite images show damage from Israeli attack on 2 secret Iranian military bases
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Satellite images show damage from Israeli attack on 2 secret Iranian military bases

The Iranian military did not acknowledge any damage to Hojir or Parchin in the Israeli attack early on Saturday, but it was stated that four Iranian soldiers working in the country’s air defense systems were killed in the attack.

Iran’s mission to the United Nations did not immediately respond to a request for comment, nor did the Israeli military.

But Iran’s Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei stopped short of calling for an immediate retaliatory strike, telling viewers on Sunday that the Israeli strike “should not be exaggerated or underestimated.” Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said in a separate statement on Sunday that Israel’s strikes “inflicted serious damage” on Iran and that the dam “achieved all its objectives.”

Damage spread to three provinces of Iran

It is not yet known how many sites in total were targeted in the Israeli attack. So far, no damage images have been released by the Iranian army.

Iranian officials determined that the affected areas were in Ilam, Khuzestan and Tehran provinces. Burnt areas were visible in satellite images from Planet Labs PBC around the Tange Bijar natural gas production facility in Iran’s Ilam province on Saturday, but it was not immediately clear whether this was related to the attack. Ilam province is located on the Iran-Iraq border in Western Iran.

The most visible damage can be seen in Planet Labs images of Parchin near the Mamalu Dam, about 40 kilometers southeast of downtown Tehran. One structure appeared to be completely destroyed and others were damaged in the attack.

Damage to at least two structures can be seen in satellite images in Hojir, approximately 19 kilometers from Tehran city center.

Analysts, including Decker Eveleth of the Virginia-based think tank CNA, Joe Truzman of the Washington-based Foundation for Defense of Democracies, and former United Nations weapons inspector David Albright, as well as other open source experts, first identified the damage at the bases. . The locations of the two bases match videos obtained by the AP showing Iranian air defenses opening fire in the vicinity early Saturday.

Base once linked to Iran’s nuclear weapons program

Albright’s Institute for Science and International Security identified the collapsed building on the mountainside in Parchin as “Taleghan 2.” An archive of Iranian nuclear data previously seized by Israel stated that the building housed “a smaller, taller high-explosive chamber and a flash X-ray system for examining small-scale high explosive tests.”

“Such tests may have involved high explosives compressing the natural uranium nucleus, simulating the detonation of a nuclear explosive,” says a 2018 report by the institute.

In a message posted to social platform Secret renovation efforts following a request for access to Parchin in 2011.”

It was unclear what equipment would be located inside the “Taleghan 2” building early on Saturday. There were no Israeli attacks on Iran’s oil industry, nuclear enrichment sites, or the nuclear power plant in Bushehr at the time of the attack.

IAEA chief Rafael Mariano Grossi confirmed in X that “Iran’s nuclear facilities were not affected.”

“Investigators are safe and continue their vital work,” he added. “I call for caution and to stay away from actions that could endanger the safety and security of nuclear and other radioactive materials.”

Damage seen at Iran’s ballistic missile program facilities

Other buildings destroyed in Khojir and Parchin likely included a warehouse and other buildings where Iran uses industrial mixers to produce the solid fuel needed for its extensive ballistic missile arsenal, Eveleth said.

In a statement made immediately after the attack on Saturday, the Israeli army said it targeted “missile production facilities used to produce the missiles that Iran fired at the state of Israel last year.”

Destroying such facilities could greatly disrupt Iran’s ability to produce new ballistic missiles to replenish its arsenal following two attacks on Israel. Iran’s paramilitary Revolutionary Guard, which oversees the country’s ballistic missile program, has remained silent since Saturday’s attack.

Iran’s total ballistic missile arsenal, which includes short-range missiles that cannot reach Israel, was estimated at “over 3,000” by General Kenneth McKenzie, then commander of the US military’s Central Command, in his testimony to the US Senate in 2022. Since then, Iran has fired hundreds of missiles in a series of attacks.

No videos or photos of missile fragments or damage to civilian neighborhoods were posted on social media following the latest attack; This suggests that Israeli strikes were much more accurate than Iran’s ballistic missile strikes targeting Israel in April and October. Israel relied on missiles fired from aircraft during its attack.

But a factory appears to have been hit in Shamsabad Industrial City, just south of Tehran, near Imam Khomeini International Airport, the country’s main gateway to the outside world. Online videos of the damaged building corresponded to the address of a firm known as TIECO, which bills itself as a manufacturer of advanced machinery used in Iran’s oil and gas industry.

TIECO officials asked the AP to write a letter to the company before answering questions. The company did not immediately respond to the letter sent to it.