
Israeli defense officials said Saturday that most of Iran’s military-industrial infrastructure has already been damaged and that further strikes could push that figure to 90% within days.
IDF officials believe around 70% of the components of Iran’s military industry have already been damaged, and that the goal is to raise that figure to roughly 90% within days, a senior military officer said on Saturday
According to the officer, the campaign has targeted surface-to-surface and surface-to-air missile infrastructure, defense ministry production sites, ballistic systems manufacturing facilities, and a headquarters involved in developing naval weapons, Walla reported.
The officer said the strikes were designed not only to inflict immediate operational damage but also to weaken the Iranian regime’s future production capacity through economic disruption. The report said some of the targeted facilities were also used to supply Hamas and Hezbollah.
The senior officer also said Israel was carrying out attacks on Iranian nuclear-related targets in a methodical manner and was not wasting munitions. He added that previously struck sites had been hit again, including facilities in Arak, while declining to comment on attempts to restore activity there.
IDF attacks nuclear sites
Later on Saturday, IDF Spokesperson Brig.-Gen. Effie Defrin said that two sites in Iran had been attacked, including what he described as a uranium facility and the heavy water plant in Arak, which he said had been used in nuclear weapons development.
In Lebanon, the IDF said ground operations were continuing as part of an effort to expand the forward line and dismantle Hezbollah’s armed infrastructure.
According to the senior office, Israeli forces struck command centers, command-and-control systems, and financing channels, including banks and gas stations, while the group’s daily launch capacity had fallen sharply from around 100 planned launches a day to roughly 10.
LATEST POSTS
- 1
Moldova says Russian drones violated airspace - 2
NASA loses contact with its Maven spacecraft orbiting Mars for the past decade - 3
'War is not over': Detailed diagrams of prisons found in cells of Oct. 7 terrorists - 4
Looking for under-the-radar adventures? Try Norway's Vesterålen - 5
What to know about the hepatitis B shot — and why Trump officials are targeting it
Songbirds swap colorful plumage genes across species lines among their evolutionary neighbors
Yes, NASA's launching Artemis 2 astronauts to the moon on April Fools' Day. It's not a joke.
Warship sunk by British fleet, remains of sailor found after 225 years
US EPA will reassess safety of herbicide paraquat, says its chief
My Pioneering Excursion: Building a Startup
Inside Plan with Houseplants: An Aide
Vote In favor of Feasible Way You Prescribe to Shop for Garments
The most effective method to Guarantee Simple Availability in Seniors' SUVs
Yemen's Houthis ready to join Iran war if needed, raising new shipping risk













