Iranian missiles hit Israeli military sites, visuals show
Some missiles broke through air defenses to strike or land near at least three Israeli military and intelligence installations.
Video shows missiles impacting and being intercepted at Nevatim airbase in southern Israel. (Video: X)
At least two dozen long-range Iranian ballistic missiles broke through Israeli and allied air defenses on Tuesday night, striking or landing near at least three military and intelligence installations, according to a review of videos and photos of the attack and aftermath.
Videos
verified by The Washington Post showed 20 missiles striking the Nevatim
air base, in the southern Negev desert, and three striking the Tel Nof
base, in central Israel. Analysts told The Post the visuals were
consistent with direct impacts on the bases rather than debris from
intercepted missiles. Other videos showed that at least two missiles
landed near Tel Aviv in Cinema City Glilot, Hod Hasharon, close to
Israel’s Mossad spy agency headquarters, leaving at least two craters.
The
findings raise questions about the full scope of the damage to Israeli
military bases and suggest that Iran was more successful in evading
Israel’s defenses than in April, when only two munitions eluded air
defenses and impacted Israel, according to Post reporting.
The Israeli military said air defense systems identified 180 missiles fired from Iran but did not respond to questions about the number of locations affected by the strikes. The United States and Israel have said that there was minimal damage on the ground, and the Israeli military said Wednesday that its bases were fully operational.
The Pentagon declined to comment on The Post’s findings. The Israeli military did not respond to a request for comment.
Three
videos synchronized by The Post show a cascade of missiles streaking
toward Nevatim air base. A bright flash is seen midair where an Israeli
interceptor appears to stop an incoming missile. Fireballs and plumes of
smoke rise above the horizon in at least 20 locations where missiles
struck the ground, according to a Post analysis of the 30-second videos,
which begin after the missiles are in the sky.
Synchronized videos show missiles landing and being intercepted at Nevatim air base in southern Israel. (Video: X)
“The
further away the missile is launched, the greater the margin of error,”
said Jeffrey Lewis, director of the East Asia Nonproliferation Program
at the Middlebury Institute of International Studies in California. He
added that when Iran previously launched missiles at Nevatim air base in
April, half fell within three-quarters of a mile of the base and half fell outside that radius, according to his team’s calculations.
The Israeli military has two missile defense systems
— Arrow II and Arrow III — that are designed to defend against
long-range ballistic missiles like those used by Iran in Tuesday’s
attack. Arrow II works after the missile has entered the final phase of
its flight, inside the atmosphere, while Arrow III aims to intercept
missiles still in space, said Fabian Hinz, an Iran analyst at the
International Institute for Strategic Studies in Berlin who follows the
missile program closely.
Medium-resolution
satellite imagery collected by Planet Labs on Wednesday shows what
appears to be at least one destroyed building at Nevatim. A
high-resolution image of another part of the base shows a large hole in
the roof of an aircraft hangar and several impact craters.
Destroyed building 4000 feet north
Satellite © Planet Labs 2024
Lewis said his team counted 32 strikes on Nevatim alone.
North
of the Nevatim air base, a video filmed on the balcony of the Hilton
hotel in Tel Aviv shows two missiles speeding through the sky from the
east toward Cinema City Glilot, Hod Hasharon, close to Mossad
headquarters. One hits the ground, emitting a large flash of light. The other falls into the sea.
A
video filmed in the immediate aftermath and published to social media
on Tuesday shows a sprawling crater in the middle of a highway, stopping
traffic completely. The vehicles closest to the impact are coated in a
thin layer of dirt. Some appear to have had their windows blown out.
The
missile hit the median of the highway, creating a crater that appears
to be roughly 20 feet wide and more than a dozen feet deep, an analysis
of video shows. A Post journalist saw a second crater on the same
highway.
A
missile strikes near Tel Aviv, close to Israel’s Mossad spy agency
headquarters. Subsequent video shows the likely resulting crater.
(Video: X/@kann_news)
It was not immediately clear what kind of missiles were used in the attack.
Iran’s state-run Mehr News Agency
reported that Ghadr and Emad missiles were used, adding that 90 percent
of the missiles hit their targets. The Ghadr and Emad are among the
longest-range missiles in Iran’s arsenal.
Iran also said it used a Fattah-1 missile for the first time, which it
has said can maneuver at high speeds to avoid interceptors.
Another video, first geolocated by open-source researchers
and independently confirmed by The Post, shows multiple towers of smoke
floating above the horizon line from another barrage of missiles that
struck the Tel Nof air base. Bright flashes following a missile impact
appear to be a secondary explosion.
Video shows missiles landing at Tel Nof air base in Israel. (Video: X)
A crater is visible on the grounds of a school not far from the base in Gedera, video published to X and confirmed by The Post shows. The school’s wall has pulled away, exposing empty classrooms inside.
Adam Taylor, Missy Ryan, Jarrett Ley and Nilo Tabrizy contributed to this report.
correction
A
previous version of this article incorrectly said that the Israeli
military declined to comment on The Post’s findings. The Israeli
military did not respond to a request for comment. The article has been
corrected.