Iran - Israel/US War: Israel-US declare war on Iran, Iran responds

Israel Inflicted Severe Damage on Iran’s Missile Program and Air Defenses​



WASHINGTON—Israel’s punishing airstrike against Iran last month shredded Tehran’s strategic air defenses and severely damaged missile production facilities, leaving it badly exposed to future attacks, U.S. and Israeli officials said.

That has sharply raised the risks for Iran should it follow through on threats to carry out another round of missile strikes against Israel in coming days, current and former officials said.

On Oct. 26, Israel struck key facilities for producing solid-fueled missiles at the sprawling Parchin military site near Tehran and at the Shahroud ballistic missile and space center run by Iran’s elite Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps, commercial satellite photos have shown. It also knocked out Russian-made S-300 missile defense systems.

Tehran still has hundreds of missiles that can reach Israel and do significant damage should they penetrate Israeli defenses, according to Western officials. But the damage to Iran’s air defenses would make it easier for Israel to retaliate against even more sensitive targets, including the country’s leadership, energy infrastructure and perhaps nuclear sites. That is a risk Tehran will have to factor in.

“The operational debate in Iran is likely dominated less by what can Iran do but how will Iran defend itself when Israel retaliates,” said Norman Roule, a former Middle East specialist at the Central Intelligence Agency. “This is unlikely to be an easy discussion and may produce sharp debates within Iran’s senior leadership.”

Israel hit around 20 targets last late month, staying within the red lines Washington had pushed for the attack. While Iran initially played down the attack, some senior Iranian officials are now talking about mounting an aggressive retaliation.

“We will give an unimaginable response to the enemy,” Gen. Hossein Salami, the head of the Revolutionary Guard, said this past week.

The Israeli attack was carried out in three waves, beginning with Iran’s strategic air defenses. Strikes landed within about 7 yards of S-300 batteries, rendering the Russian-made defense systems inoperable. It could take several months for Iran to fix or replace those systems if they receive Russian assistance, a regional security official said.

The next wave arrived about 80 minutes later, focusing on ballistic missile production. The final wave, an hour later, struck radars, headquarters, antennas and some missile launchers.

The operation was intended to demonstrate to Iran that the Israelis could strike all over the country. “We wanted them to realize they were exposed,” a regional security officer said Friday.

Some U.S. officials said that Iran’s production of solid-fueled missiles could be delayed by a year or more.

Israel’s main targets at the missile facilities were so-called planetary mixers, which are used to blend components for solid rocket fuel used in its most advanced missile. The mixers can’t be easily replaced, analysts said.

While most of Iran’s missiles are liquid-fueled, the attack delivered a blow to some of Iran’s most valued weapons programs
Israel hit around a dozen mixing facilities at three sites, most of which were destroyed. In addition to Parchin, two buildings at Iran’s ballistic-missile complex at Khojir and buildings at the Revolutionary Guard’s Shahroud space center site were damaged, said Fabian Hinz, research fellow for defense and military analysis at the International Institute for Strategic Studies.

has long been used to produce solid propellant fueled space launchers, but there is strong evidence that the Revolutionary Guard has also been using it to build ballistic missiles. There is one solid propellant facility Israel apparently didn’t hit—possibly because it was producing solid propellant motors for shorter-range missiles, Hinz said.

Israel’s strikes, according to experts and former officials, had a second potentially significant impact, facilitating a future strike on Iran’s nuclear facilities by making it less risky to operate in Iranian airspace.

“I think Iran is the most vulnerable they have been in many years to another Israeli attack,” said retired Gen. Frank McKenzie, the former commander of U.S. Central Command.

The Revolutionary Guard, which has lost senior officers in previous Israeli airstrikes in Syria and Lebanon, is eager to strike back, according to regional analysts. But other Iranian officials are likely to be more cautious.

The degree of precision Israel showed in its attacks underscored to Iran’s leadership how vulnerable the country’s military and civilian assets and infrastructure have become, analysts said.

“Israel not only opted to destroy the defensive shield protecting some of Iran’s nuclear and oil installation, but also to reinforce the message that Iran was so deeply penetrated that Israel would know precisely where and how to hit effectively Iran’s most sensitive missile and nuclear weapons related facilities,” said Ariel Levite, a senior fellow in the nuclear policy program at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace and a former Israeli official.

Though Israel stayed away from Iran’s nuclear sites in last month’s attacks, it did hit a building at Parchin that had been used by Iran to conduct suspected nuclear weapons research, satellite imagery showed.

The strikes on S-300 air defense batteries have made it easier for Israel to hit Tehran’s nuclear sites if it decides to do so in future attacks, said Michael Horowitz, the Israel-based head of intelligence for the consulting firm Le Beck.

“These phased attacks are complex, as airplanes can’t stay in the air forever and would have to come back home at some point. Now, phase one of the attack is done—this makes things easier for any future attack,” he said.

With Iran’s most advanced missile defenses out of operation, Israel could move aerial refueling tankers closer to the border, which would enable its warplanes to carry heavier payloads and less fuel, Horowitz said.

Iran’s space program is considered by Western officials as a pathway for it to develop intercontinental missiles, giving its engineers experience in developing powerful booster rockets that could be used for longer-range missiles.

Solid-propellant missiles are considered more reliable than those with liquid fuel because they can be stored far longer and are less volatile. Solid-fueled missiles are much more practical to use in a swift, large-scale mass attack, such as the one Iran launched against Israel on Oct. 1.

The Revolutionary Guard unveiled the Kheibar Shekan missile in 2022. Last year, it inaugurated the Fattah-1. The Guard said the missiles have a range of around 1,400 kilometers, or about 870 miles, putting Israel in their reach.

Israel also hit two long-range Iranian radars near the Iraqi border and carried out a limited strike around the Abadan refinery in a possible warning about future hits on oil facilities.

 
That is why I miss principlists especially Shaheed Ebrahim Raisi

Many of the reformists are paid agents/spies and work for the enemies
True Promise 2 was miles better than True Promise 1.
At the end of the day, the reformists alone do not make decisions like this in the system.
The Council of National Security decides in situations like this and the reformists are in the minority there even now.
 

Israel Inflicted Severe Damage on Iran’s Missile Program and Air Defenses​



WASHINGTON—Israel’s punishing airstrike against Iran last month shredded Tehran’s strategic air defenses and severely damaged missile production facilities, leaving it badly exposed to future attacks, U.S. and Israeli officials said.

That has sharply raised the risks for Iran should it follow through on threats to carry out another round of missile strikes against Israel in coming days, current and former officials said.

On Oct. 26, Israel struck key facilities for producing solid-fueled missiles at the sprawling Parchin military site near Tehran and at the Shahroud ballistic missile and space center run by Iran’s elite Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps, commercial satellite photos have shown. It also knocked out Russian-made S-300 missile defense systems.

Tehran still has hundreds of missiles that can reach Israel and do significant damage should they penetrate Israeli defenses, according to Western officials. But the damage to Iran’s air defenses would make it easier for Israel to retaliate against even more sensitive targets, including the country’s leadership, energy infrastructure and perhaps nuclear sites. That is a risk Tehran will have to factor in.

“The operational debate in Iran is likely dominated less by what can Iran do but how will Iran defend itself when Israel retaliates,” said Norman Roule, a former Middle East specialist at the Central Intelligence Agency. “This is unlikely to be an easy discussion and may produce sharp debates within Iran’s senior leadership.”

Israel hit around 20 targets last late month, staying within the red lines Washington had pushed for the attack. While Iran initially played down the attack, some senior Iranian officials are now talking about mounting an aggressive retaliation.

“We will give an unimaginable response to the enemy,” Gen. Hossein Salami, the head of the Revolutionary Guard, said this past week.

The Israeli attack was carried out in three waves, beginning with Iran’s strategic air defenses. Strikes landed within about 7 yards of S-300 batteries, rendering the Russian-made defense systems inoperable. It could take several months for Iran to fix or replace those systems if they receive Russian assistance, a regional security official said.

The next wave arrived about 80 minutes later, focusing on ballistic missile production. The final wave, an hour later, struck radars, headquarters, antennas and some missile launchers.

The operation was intended to demonstrate to Iran that the Israelis could strike all over the country. “We wanted them to realize they were exposed,” a regional security officer said Friday.

Some U.S. officials said that Iran’s production of solid-fueled missiles could be delayed by a year or more.

Israel’s main targets at the missile facilities were so-called planetary mixers, which are used to blend components for solid rocket fuel used in its most advanced missile. The mixers can’t be easily replaced, analysts said.

While most of Iran’s missiles are liquid-fueled, the attack delivered a blow to some of Iran’s most valued weapons programs
Israel hit around a dozen mixing facilities at three sites, most of which were destroyed. In addition to Parchin, two buildings at Iran’s ballistic-missile complex at Khojir and buildings at the Revolutionary Guard’s Shahroud space center site were damaged, said Fabian Hinz, research fellow for defense and military analysis at the International Institute for Strategic Studies.

has long been used to produce solid propellant fueled space launchers, but there is strong evidence that the Revolutionary Guard has also been using it to build ballistic missiles. There is one solid propellant facility Israel apparently didn’t hit—possibly because it was producing solid propellant motors for shorter-range missiles, Hinz said.

Israel’s strikes, according to experts and former officials, had a second potentially significant impact, facilitating a future strike on Iran’s nuclear facilities by making it less risky to operate in Iranian airspace.

“I think Iran is the most vulnerable they have been in many years to another Israeli attack,” said retired Gen. Frank McKenzie, the former commander of U.S. Central Command.

The Revolutionary Guard, which has lost senior officers in previous Israeli airstrikes in Syria and Lebanon, is eager to strike back, according to regional analysts. But other Iranian officials are likely to be more cautious.

The degree of precision Israel showed in its attacks underscored to Iran’s leadership how vulnerable the country’s military and civilian assets and infrastructure have become, analysts said.

“Israel not only opted to destroy the defensive shield protecting some of Iran’s nuclear and oil installation, but also to reinforce the message that Iran was so deeply penetrated that Israel would know precisely where and how to hit effectively Iran’s most sensitive missile and nuclear weapons related facilities,” said Ariel Levite, a senior fellow in the nuclear policy program at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace and a former Israeli official.

Though Israel stayed away from Iran’s nuclear sites in last month’s attacks, it did hit a building at Parchin that had been used by Iran to conduct suspected nuclear weapons research, satellite imagery showed.

The strikes on S-300 air defense batteries have made it easier for Israel to hit Tehran’s nuclear sites if it decides to do so in future attacks, said Michael Horowitz, the Israel-based head of intelligence for the consulting firm Le Beck.

“These phased attacks are complex, as airplanes can’t stay in the air forever and would have to come back home at some point. Now, phase one of the attack is done—this makes things easier for any future attack,” he said.

With Iran’s most advanced missile defenses out of operation, Israel could move aerial refueling tankers closer to the border, which would enable its warplanes to carry heavier payloads and less fuel, Horowitz said.

Iran’s space program is considered by Western officials as a pathway for it to develop intercontinental missiles, giving its engineers experience in developing powerful booster rockets that could be used for longer-range missiles.

Solid-propellant missiles are considered more reliable than those with liquid fuel because they can be stored far longer and are less volatile. Solid-fueled missiles are much more practical to use in a swift, large-scale mass attack, such as the one Iran launched against Israel on Oct. 1.

The Revolutionary Guard unveiled the Kheibar Shekan missile in 2022. Last year, it inaugurated the Fattah-1. The Guard said the missiles have a range of around 1,400 kilometers, or about 870 miles, putting Israel in their reach.

Israel also hit two long-range Iranian radars near the Iraqi border and carried out a limited strike around the Abadan refinery in a possible warning about future hits on oil facilities.

The damage to Iranian air defense capabilities is minimal.

Did you Westerners really think the S-300 hit was all Iran had for AD? I think more are kept in reserves to make the Israelis and Americans surprised when they do come barging in with their planes thinking all AD systems are destroyed already! Heck, I dare say Iran might have some hidden S-400 batteries or a local equivalent developed in secret, waiting to be taken out from an unknown mountain base.

And Iran's ballistic missile production capabilities are still alive and well; most of the main production material are in underground dispersed locations where US surveillance assets can't pinpoint exactly where.

Israel is gonna be shocked beyond belief when they see the surprises Iran has in store for them and the USA that will severely knock them out cold and teach that Satanyahu demon a lesson.
 

Israel Inflicted Severe Damage on Iran’s Missile Program and Air Defenses​



WASHINGTON—Israel’s punishing airstrike against Iran last month shredded Tehran’s strategic air defenses and severely damaged missile production facilities, leaving it badly exposed to future attacks, U.S. and Israeli officials said.

That has sharply raised the risks for Iran should it follow through on threats to carry out another round of missile strikes against Israel in coming days, current and former officials said.

On Oct. 26, Israel struck key facilities for producing solid-fueled missiles at the sprawling Parchin military site near Tehran and at the Shahroud ballistic missile and space center run by Iran’s elite Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps, commercial satellite photos have shown. It also knocked out Russian-made S-300 missile defense systems.

Tehran still has hundreds of missiles that can reach Israel and do significant damage should they penetrate Israeli defenses, according to Western officials. But the damage to Iran’s air defenses would make it easier for Israel to retaliate against even more sensitive targets, including the country’s leadership, energy infrastructure and perhaps nuclear sites. That is a risk Tehran will have to factor in.

“The operational debate in Iran is likely dominated less by what can Iran do but how will Iran defend itself when Israel retaliates,” said Norman Roule, a former Middle East specialist at the Central Intelligence Agency. “This is unlikely to be an easy discussion and may produce sharp debates within Iran’s senior leadership.”

Israel hit around 20 targets last late month, staying within the red lines Washington had pushed for the attack. While Iran initially played down the attack, some senior Iranian officials are now talking about mounting an aggressive retaliation.

“We will give an unimaginable response to the enemy,” Gen. Hossein Salami, the head of the Revolutionary Guard, said this past week.

The Israeli attack was carried out in three waves, beginning with Iran’s strategic air defenses. Strikes landed within about 7 yards of S-300 batteries, rendering the Russian-made defense systems inoperable. It could take several months for Iran to fix or replace those systems if they receive Russian assistance, a regional security official said.

The next wave arrived about 80 minutes later, focusing on ballistic missile production. The final wave, an hour later, struck radars, headquarters, antennas and some missile launchers.

The operation was intended to demonstrate to Iran that the Israelis could strike all over the country. “We wanted them to realize they were exposed,” a regional security officer said Friday.

Some U.S. officials said that Iran’s production of solid-fueled missiles could be delayed by a year or more.

Israel’s main targets at the missile facilities were so-called planetary mixers, which are used to blend components for solid rocket fuel used in its most advanced missile. The mixers can’t be easily replaced, analysts said.

While most of Iran’s missiles are liquid-fueled, the attack delivered a blow to some of Iran’s most valued weapons programs
Israel hit around a dozen mixing facilities at three sites, most of which were destroyed. In addition to Parchin, two buildings at Iran’s ballistic-missile complex at Khojir and buildings at the Revolutionary Guard’s Shahroud space center site were damaged, said Fabian Hinz, research fellow for defense and military analysis at the International Institute for Strategic Studies.

has long been used to produce solid propellant fueled space launchers, but there is strong evidence that the Revolutionary Guard has also been using it to build ballistic missiles. There is one solid propellant facility Israel apparently didn’t hit—possibly because it was producing solid propellant motors for shorter-range missiles, Hinz said.

Israel’s strikes, according to experts and former officials, had a second potentially significant impact, facilitating a future strike on Iran’s nuclear facilities by making it less risky to operate in Iranian airspace.

“I think Iran is the most vulnerable they have been in many years to another Israeli attack,” said retired Gen. Frank McKenzie, the former commander of U.S. Central Command.

The Revolutionary Guard, which has lost senior officers in previous Israeli airstrikes in Syria and Lebanon, is eager to strike back, according to regional analysts. But other Iranian officials are likely to be more cautious.

The degree of precision Israel showed in its attacks underscored to Iran’s leadership how vulnerable the country’s military and civilian assets and infrastructure have become, analysts said.

“Israel not only opted to destroy the defensive shield protecting some of Iran’s nuclear and oil installation, but also to reinforce the message that Iran was so deeply penetrated that Israel would know precisely where and how to hit effectively Iran’s most sensitive missile and nuclear weapons related facilities,” said Ariel Levite, a senior fellow in the nuclear policy program at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace and a former Israeli official.

Though Israel stayed away from Iran’s nuclear sites in last month’s attacks, it did hit a building at Parchin that had been used by Iran to conduct suspected nuclear weapons research, satellite imagery showed.

The strikes on S-300 air defense batteries have made it easier for Israel to hit Tehran’s nuclear sites if it decides to do so in future attacks, said Michael Horowitz, the Israel-based head of intelligence for the consulting firm Le Beck.

“These phased attacks are complex, as airplanes can’t stay in the air forever and would have to come back home at some point. Now, phase one of the attack is done—this makes things easier for any future attack,” he said.

With Iran’s most advanced missile defenses out of operation, Israel could move aerial refueling tankers closer to the border, which would enable its warplanes to carry heavier payloads and less fuel, Horowitz said.

Iran’s space program is considered by Western officials as a pathway for it to develop intercontinental missiles, giving its engineers experience in developing powerful booster rockets that could be used for longer-range missiles.

Solid-propellant missiles are considered more reliable than those with liquid fuel because they can be stored far longer and are less volatile. Solid-fueled missiles are much more practical to use in a swift, large-scale mass attack, such as the one Iran launched against Israel on Oct. 1.

The Revolutionary Guard unveiled the Kheibar Shekan missile in 2022. Last year, it inaugurated the Fattah-1. The Guard said the missiles have a range of around 1,400 kilometers, or about 870 miles, putting Israel in their reach.

Israel also hit two long-range Iranian radars near the Iraqi border and carried out a limited strike around the Abadan refinery in a possible warning about future hits on oil facilities.



Can we have a neutral source or where are all those satellite images to prove the claim?

Also why were only S-300s hit and not the more capable Khordad-15(shorter range of 120km though as opposed to 195km) and Bavar-373(300 km range) systems?
 

Israel Inflicted Severe Damage on Iran’s Missile Program and Air Defenses​



WASHINGTON—Israel’s punishing airstrike against Iran last month shredded Tehran’s strategic air defenses and severely damaged missile production facilities, leaving it badly exposed to future attacks, U.S. and Israeli officials said.

That has sharply raised the risks for Iran should it follow through on threats to carry out another round of missile strikes against Israel in coming days, current and former officials said.

On Oct. 26, Israel struck key facilities for producing solid-fueled missiles at the sprawling Parchin military site near Tehran and at the Shahroud ballistic missile and space center run by Iran’s elite Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps, commercial satellite photos have shown. It also knocked out Russian-made S-300 missile defense systems.

Tehran still has hundreds of missiles that can reach Israel and do significant damage should they penetrate Israeli defenses, according to Western officials. But the damage to Iran’s air defenses would make it easier for Israel to retaliate against even more sensitive targets, including the country’s leadership, energy infrastructure and perhaps nuclear sites. That is a risk Tehran will have to factor in.

“The operational debate in Iran is likely dominated less by what can Iran do but how will Iran defend itself when Israel retaliates,” said Norman Roule, a former Middle East specialist at the Central Intelligence Agency. “This is unlikely to be an easy discussion and may produce sharp debates within Iran’s senior leadership.”

Israel hit around 20 targets last late month, staying within the red lines Washington had pushed for the attack. While Iran initially played down the attack, some senior Iranian officials are now talking about mounting an aggressive retaliation.

“We will give an unimaginable response to the enemy,” Gen. Hossein Salami, the head of the Revolutionary Guard, said this past week.

The Israeli attack was carried out in three waves, beginning with Iran’s strategic air defenses. Strikes landed within about 7 yards of S-300 batteries, rendering the Russian-made defense systems inoperable. It could take several months for Iran to fix or replace those systems if they receive Russian assistance, a regional security official said.

The next wave arrived about 80 minutes later, focusing on ballistic missile production. The final wave, an hour later, struck radars, headquarters, antennas and some missile launchers.

The operation was intended to demonstrate to Iran that the Israelis could strike all over the country. “We wanted them to realize they were exposed,” a regional security officer said Friday.

Some U.S. officials said that Iran’s production of solid-fueled missiles could be delayed by a year or more.

Israel’s main targets at the missile facilities were so-called planetary mixers, which are used to blend components for solid rocket fuel used in its most advanced missile. The mixers can’t be easily replaced, analysts said.

While most of Iran’s missiles are liquid-fueled, the attack delivered a blow to some of Iran’s most valued weapons programs
Israel hit around a dozen mixing facilities at three sites, most of which were destroyed. In addition to Parchin, two buildings at Iran’s ballistic-missile complex at Khojir and buildings at the Revolutionary Guard’s Shahroud space center site were damaged, said Fabian Hinz, research fellow for defense and military analysis at the International Institute for Strategic Studies.

has long been used to produce solid propellant fueled space launchers, but there is strong evidence that the Revolutionary Guard has also been using it to build ballistic missiles. There is one solid propellant facility Israel apparently didn’t hit—possibly because it was producing solid propellant motors for shorter-range missiles, Hinz said.

Israel’s strikes, according to experts and former officials, had a second potentially significant impact, facilitating a future strike on Iran’s nuclear facilities by making it less risky to operate in Iranian airspace.

“I think Iran is the most vulnerable they have been in many years to another Israeli attack,” said retired Gen. Frank McKenzie, the former commander of U.S. Central Command.

The Revolutionary Guard, which has lost senior officers in previous Israeli airstrikes in Syria and Lebanon, is eager to strike back, according to regional analysts. But other Iranian officials are likely to be more cautious.

The degree of precision Israel showed in its attacks underscored to Iran’s leadership how vulnerable the country’s military and civilian assets and infrastructure have become, analysts said.

“Israel not only opted to destroy the defensive shield protecting some of Iran’s nuclear and oil installation, but also to reinforce the message that Iran was so deeply penetrated that Israel would know precisely where and how to hit effectively Iran’s most sensitive missile and nuclear weapons related facilities,” said Ariel Levite, a senior fellow in the nuclear policy program at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace and a former Israeli official.

Though Israel stayed away from Iran’s nuclear sites in last month’s attacks, it did hit a building at Parchin that had been used by Iran to conduct suspected nuclear weapons research, satellite imagery showed.

The strikes on S-300 air defense batteries have made it easier for Israel to hit Tehran’s nuclear sites if it decides to do so in future attacks, said Michael Horowitz, the Israel-based head of intelligence for the consulting firm Le Beck.

“These phased attacks are complex, as airplanes can’t stay in the air forever and would have to come back home at some point. Now, phase one of the attack is done—this makes things easier for any future attack,” he said.

With Iran’s most advanced missile defenses out of operation, Israel could move aerial refueling tankers closer to the border, which would enable its warplanes to carry heavier payloads and less fuel, Horowitz said.

Iran’s space program is considered by Western officials as a pathway for it to develop intercontinental missiles, giving its engineers experience in developing powerful booster rockets that could be used for longer-range missiles.

Solid-propellant missiles are considered more reliable than those with liquid fuel because they can be stored far longer and are less volatile. Solid-fueled missiles are much more practical to use in a swift, large-scale mass attack, such as the one Iran launched against Israel on Oct. 1.

The Revolutionary Guard unveiled the Kheibar Shekan missile in 2022. Last year, it inaugurated the Fattah-1. The Guard said the missiles have a range of around 1,400 kilometers, or about 870 miles, putting Israel in their reach.

Israel also hit two long-range Iranian radars near the Iraqi border and carried out a limited strike around the Abadan refinery in a possible warning about future hits on oil facilities.

200kg small warhead is too small a payload to destroy, let alone damage buried reinforced concrete structures.

Irans a hard target bud. It’s also a huge country and your gubment in no mood to go full hog either.
 
These are for bombing areas without air defense
Sure, but with heavy bomber like Tu95 or B52, the goal is that it should enter after major AD sites are destroyed using fighters such as F-22/F-35 or F-15/16/18 and others

The B-52 will not enter a contested airspace, this would be suicide, same for helicopters and gunships

Removing all Iranian AD is a major and difficult task that only the US could achieve, so heavy bombers value here is diminished, like Russia barely used Tu-95 inside Ukraine

So now think about blatant Israeli propaganda saying that ALL Iranian AD sites are completely destroyed, this is just impossible with such an attack and 0 proof backs this claim up, this is like saying that the whole Iran Aerospace force assets are completely destroyed with such a limited attack
 
True Promise 3 will definitely devastate all of Israel's main military production capabilities, factories, radar systems, and many more.

Heck, if Iran is prepared for a total war that even draws in the US, they might opt to hit as hard as they can.

Or Iran might already have nuclear weapons and will announce a test or two a day after TP3 to complicate Israel's plan of a retaliatory strike on Iran's nuclear facilities by making them think a thousand times fearing a nuclear war/exchange.

The way Khamenei and IRGC generals are so confident and fearless clearly proves that Iran already has several dozen to a 100+ nuclear weapons made and stockpiled in secret, and will test them just to put them on notice even though some are already mated in with MRBMs as warheads.

I think this will be the big surprise Israel and America will get soon, when they finally realizes that Iran has checkmated them thoroughly in this high stakes game of chess to bring down the Western-dominated Old World Order (OWO).
 

Israel Inflicted Severe Damage on Iran’s Missile Program and Air Defenses​



WASHINGTON—Israel’s punishing airstrike against Iran last month shredded Tehran’s strategic air defenses and severely damaged missile production facilities, leaving it badly exposed to future attacks, U.S. and Israeli officials said.

That has sharply raised the risks for Iran should it follow through on threats to carry out another round of missile strikes against Israel in coming days, current and former officials said.

On Oct. 26, Israel struck key facilities for producing solid-fueled missiles at the sprawling Parchin military site near Tehran and at the Shahroud ballistic missile and space center run by Iran’s elite Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps, commercial satellite photos have shown. It also knocked out Russian-made S-300 missile defense systems.

Tehran still has hundreds of missiles that can reach Israel and do significant damage should they penetrate Israeli defenses, according to Western officials. But the damage to Iran’s air defenses would make it easier for Israel to retaliate against even more sensitive targets, including the country’s leadership, energy infrastructure and perhaps nuclear sites. That is a risk Tehran will have to factor in.

“The operational debate in Iran is likely dominated less by what can Iran do but how will Iran defend itself when Israel retaliates,” said Norman Roule, a former Middle East specialist at the Central Intelligence Agency. “This is unlikely to be an easy discussion and may produce sharp debates within Iran’s senior leadership.”

Israel hit around 20 targets last late month, staying within the red lines Washington had pushed for the attack. While Iran initially played down the attack, some senior Iranian officials are now talking about mounting an aggressive retaliation.

“We will give an unimaginable response to the enemy,” Gen. Hossein Salami, the head of the Revolutionary Guard, said this past week.

The Israeli attack was carried out in three waves, beginning with Iran’s strategic air defenses. Strikes landed within about 7 yards of S-300 batteries, rendering the Russian-made defense systems inoperable. It could take several months for Iran to fix or replace those systems if they receive Russian assistance, a regional security official said.

The next wave arrived about 80 minutes later, focusing on ballistic missile production. The final wave, an hour later, struck radars, headquarters, antennas and some missile launchers.

The operation was intended to demonstrate to Iran that the Israelis could strike all over the country. “We wanted them to realize they were exposed,” a regional security officer said Friday.

Some U.S. officials said that Iran’s production of solid-fueled missiles could be delayed by a year or more.

Israel’s main targets at the missile facilities were so-called planetary mixers, which are used to blend components for solid rocket fuel used in its most advanced missile. The mixers can’t be easily replaced, analysts said.

While most of Iran’s missiles are liquid-fueled, the attack delivered a blow to some of Iran’s most valued weapons programs
Israel hit around a dozen mixing facilities at three sites, most of which were destroyed. In addition to Parchin, two buildings at Iran’s ballistic-missile complex at Khojir and buildings at the Revolutionary Guard’s Shahroud space center site were damaged, said Fabian Hinz, research fellow for defense and military analysis at the International Institute for Strategic Studies.

has long been used to produce solid propellant fueled space launchers, but there is strong evidence that the Revolutionary Guard has also been using it to build ballistic missiles. There is one solid propellant facility Israel apparently didn’t hit—possibly because it was producing solid propellant motors for shorter-range missiles, Hinz said.

Israel’s strikes, according to experts and former officials, had a second potentially significant impact, facilitating a future strike on Iran’s nuclear facilities by making it less risky to operate in Iranian airspace.

“I think Iran is the most vulnerable they have been in many years to another Israeli attack,” said retired Gen. Frank McKenzie, the former commander of U.S. Central Command.

The Revolutionary Guard, which has lost senior officers in previous Israeli airstrikes in Syria and Lebanon, is eager to strike back, according to regional analysts. But other Iranian officials are likely to be more cautious.

The degree of precision Israel showed in its attacks underscored to Iran’s leadership how vulnerable the country’s military and civilian assets and infrastructure have become, analysts said.

“Israel not only opted to destroy the defensive shield protecting some of Iran’s nuclear and oil installation, but also to reinforce the message that Iran was so deeply penetrated that Israel would know precisely where and how to hit effectively Iran’s most sensitive missile and nuclear weapons related facilities,” said Ariel Levite, a senior fellow in the nuclear policy program at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace and a former Israeli official.

Though Israel stayed away from Iran’s nuclear sites in last month’s attacks, it did hit a building at Parchin that had been used by Iran to conduct suspected nuclear weapons research, satellite imagery showed.

The strikes on S-300 air defense batteries have made it easier for Israel to hit Tehran’s nuclear sites if it decides to do so in future attacks, said Michael Horowitz, the Israel-based head of intelligence for the consulting firm Le Beck.

“These phased attacks are complex, as airplanes can’t stay in the air forever and would have to come back home at some point. Now, phase one of the attack is done—this makes things easier for any future attack,” he said.

With Iran’s most advanced missile defenses out of operation, Israel could move aerial refueling tankers closer to the border, which would enable its warplanes to carry heavier payloads and less fuel, Horowitz said.

Iran’s space program is considered by Western officials as a pathway for it to develop intercontinental missiles, giving its engineers experience in developing powerful booster rockets that could be used for longer-range missiles.

Solid-propellant missiles are considered more reliable than those with liquid fuel because they can be stored far longer and are less volatile. Solid-fueled missiles are much more practical to use in a swift, large-scale mass attack, such as the one Iran launched against Israel on Oct. 1.

The Revolutionary Guard unveiled the Kheibar Shekan missile in 2022. Last year, it inaugurated the Fattah-1. The Guard said the missiles have a range of around 1,400 kilometers, or about 870 miles, putting Israel in their reach.

Israel also hit two long-range Iranian radars near the Iraqi border and carried out a limited strike around the Abadan refinery in a possible warning about future hits on oil facilities.

Nonsense propaganda for Jews and Western idiots.

Similar to the 99% interception crap they used to claim
 
The damage to Iranian air defense capabilities is minimal.

Did you Westerners really think the S-300 hit was all Iran had for AD? I think more are kept in reserves to make the Israelis and Americans surprised when they do come barging in with their planes thinking all AD systems are destroyed already! Heck, I dare say Iran might have some hidden S-400 batteries or a local equivalent developed in secret, waiting to be taken out from an unknown mountain base.

And Iran's ballistic missile production capabilities are still alive and well; most of the main production material are in underground dispersed locations where US surveillance assets can't pinpoint exactly where.

Israel is gonna be shocked beyond belief when they see the surprises Iran has in store for them and the USA that will severely knock them out cold and teach that Satanyahu demon a lesson.
Just saying that S-300 sites are located near all nuclear facilities, and that no explosion happened near them and no damage was done to the facilities according to IAEA

So far one satellite picture possibly shows damage to a radar (forgot which one it is but from S-300). And one satellite image showed an intact S-300 battalion
 
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Here we go again
 
Nonsense propaganda for Jews and Western idiots.

Similar to the 99% interception crap they used to claim
The major problem with that propaganda is that a majority of people believes in it

As an example you can look the Wikipedia page which massively relays this propaganda and writes that Iran has suffered a major blow and that Iran missile program is delayed for 6 months, and other absurd claims

Iran needs its own propaganda destined to western people, like China Daily or RT, PressTV doesn't work well in the west because it doesn't adapt to western mindset and habits

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Here we go again

Best thing to do is to not listen those western prediction, they are serial liars

"The timing and method of Iran’s response have not been finalized, and any action will be coordinated with our allies in the region"

I'm ready to wait for weeks and even months
 
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Sure, but with heavy bomber like Tu95 or B52, the goal is that it should enter after major AD sites are destroyed using fighters such as F-22/F-35 or F-15/16/18 and others

The B-52 will not enter a contested airspace, this would be suicide, same for helicopters and gunships

Removing all Iranian AD is a major and difficult task that only the US could achieve, so heavy bombers value here is diminished, like Russia barely used Tu-95 inside Ukraine

So now think about blatant Israeli propaganda saying that ALL Iranian AD sites are completely destroyed, this is just impossible with such an attack and 0 proof backs this claim up, this is like saying that the whole Iran Aerospace force assets are completely destroyed with such a limited attack

I’ve not seen anyone say all Iranian air defenses were destroyed outside some randos on X. Only the S-300 systems at strategic sites.

And B-52s can fire 20 JASSM-ER stealth cruise missiles.
 

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