New high‑resolution satellite images show vast swathes of Iran’s strategic heartland reduced to scorched craters, with multiple missile bases and key nuclear‑linked sites lying in ruins after what officials describe as the most intense Israeli strike package of the war so far.

Analysts poring over fresh imagery from western and central Iran point to entire launch complexes flattened: underground silo entrances blown open, support buildings vaporised, and long tunnels collapsed in on themselves. At two locations previously ᴀssociated with advanced centrifuge work and warhead research, roofs are peeled back like tin, inner halls gutted by precisely placed bunker‑buster hits.
Israeli security sources, speaking off the record, say F‑35s, long‑range stand‑off missiles and cyber tools were combined in a “decapitation chain” aimed at Iran’s missile command, fuel and guidance infrastructure, with select nuclear‑related facilities added to the list “to send a message.” They claim the strike has set Iran’s long‑range capabilities back “years, not months.”

Tehran insists the damage is “limited and repairable,” accusing Israel and its US backers of crossing every red line by openly targeting nuclear sites inside a non‑nuclear‑armed state. State TV shows engineers in hard hats walking through twisted halls, vowing that “the peaceful programme will continue.”
For war rooms from Jerusalem to Washington — and for nervous chancelleries in Europe and the Gulf — the images are stark: blackened grids where Iran once hid its most prized missiles and nuclear secrets. The question now is whether this night of fire has truly broken Tehran’s strike arm, or merely ensured that whatever rises from the ashes will be even harder to find — and far more dangerous.