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Iran Digging Out Its Bombed Missile Bases During Ceasefire, Satellite Images Show

Newly released commercial satellite imagery captured on Friday, April 10, reveals that Iran has begun clearing debris from tunnel entrances at an underground ballistic missile base near Khomein in Markazi Province. Front-end loaders, excavators, and dump trucks are operating at the entrances of tunnel complexes struck during a month-long campaign of coordinated US and Israeli airstrikes. The campaign focused on sealing access points rather than penetrating the deeper underground infrastructure, which remains intact inside mountainous terrain.

The Khomein facility is part of Iran's network of hardened underground installations known as missile cities, designed to protect ballistic missile launchers and enable rapid deployment. US intelligence now estimates that roughly half of Iran's missile launchers remain operational despite more than a month of sustained airstrikes, including launchers that were buried but not destroyed. Sam Lair, a researcher at the James Martin Center for Nonproliferation Studies, noted that such recovery activity is expected during a ceasefire and aligns with the basic design of the missile cities: eat the first attack, dig yourself out, then launch again.

The excavation work is taking place during a two-week pause in hostilities agreed on April 7, which has allowed Iranian engineering teams to deploy heavy equipment without fear of additional strikes. American intelligence indicates Tehran still maintains thousands of ballistic missiles in underground storage. Israeli officials have offered lower estimates of intact systems, citing differences in methodology, and Jerusalem continues to warn that the Iranian regime's ability to rebuild must be denied if a lasting peace is to be secured.

(NYP/VFI News)

"The horse is prepared for the day of battle, but deliverance is of the Lord." – Proverbs 21:31