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First wave of US strikes on Iran concluded, further waves expected — analyst

The Zioneer Intelligence Desk

Primary source Internal intake · 3 reviewed intake signals · Desk window 01:34

TL;DR

Analyst Yair Goldblatt reported Wednesday night that the first wave of US strikes on Iran has concluded, with additional waves expected. The first wave focused on southern Iran, targeting IRGC Navy bases on Qeshm Island and extensive strikes on air defense ports and radar sites along coastal cities, according to the report.

01 · THE DISPATCH

Analyst Yair Goldblatt of the 301 Arab World the source reported that the first wave of US strikes on Iran has ended as of approximately 22:24 Wednesday night. Goldblatt outlined the first wave's focus on southern Iran — specifically IRGC Navy bases on Qeshm Island, plus extensive strikes on air defense (air defense) ports and radar (radar) systems along coastal cities. He stated that further waves are expected.

As The Zioneer previously reported, a first wave of strikes was reported completed by Abu Saleh of the Arabic Desk at 22:16, followed by a report from New Security 8200 of another wave underway at 22:20. The current report adds target specificity to the first wave's scope. This follows a larger pattern of US strikes on Iranian coastal infrastructure reported over the past 24 hours, including air defense and radar degradation described in a second-wave article published on June 9. The targets named by Goldblatt align with prior reporting on US operations targeting IRGC naval and radar infrastructure in southern Iran.

02 · How it developed

3 developments

  1. Latest

    First wave targeted IRGC Navy bases on Qeshm Island and coastal radars.

  2. First wave of strikes completed; second wave currently underway.

  3. Abu Saleh lists areas under attack across region

Related dispatches
03 · Source and signal

Source and signal

  • Internal intake
Desk accountability

This dispatch is published under The Zioneer Intelligence Desk. Raw intake channels remain internal provenance; an external outlet or channel is named only when it materially helps readers evaluate a specific claim.