Iranian strikes on bases used by US caused $800m in damage, new analysis shows
Iranian strikes on bases used by US caused $800m in damage, new analysis shows 7 hours ago Daniel Bush ,Washington correspondentand Paul Brown & Alex Murray ,BBC Verify Iranian strikes on military bases used by the US in the Middle East caused about $800m (£600m) in damage in the first two weeks of the war, a new analysis shows.
The full extent of the damage caused by Iranian strikes on US assets in the region is not clear.
"The damage to US bases in the region has been underreported," said Mark Cancian, a CSIS senior adviser and co-author of the think tank study.
In response to a request for comment, the US Department of Defense referred the BBC to US Central Command, which is leading the war. Officials there declined to comment. Iran's retaliatory strikes targeted US air-defence and satellite-communication systems, among other assets, in Jordan, the United Arab Emirates, and other countries across the Middle East.
The air-defence systems are used for the long-range interception of ballistic missiles.
The repeat strikes underscore Iran's efforts to target specific US assets. Russia has reportedly shared intelligence with Tehran on American military forces in the region. Satellite imagery shows the three air bases - Ali Al-Salim base in Kuwait, Al-Udeid in Qatar and Prince Sultan in Saudi Arabia - with fresh damage appearing during different phases of the conflict.
"We're doing extremely well in Iran," Trump said at a White House event on Friday.
Analysis of satellite imagery has been hampered by restrictions imposed by major US-based providers on the release of the imagery.
Radar and satellite systems have been a focus from the start, when Iranian strikes hit a US naval base in Bahrain. They function as the eyes and ears of modern military operations. Satellite imagery most notably showed the destruction of two radomes - protective enclosures for such sensitive equipment.
Imagery of the latter shows smoke rising from a radar component for a Thaad air-defence system.
More extensive damage to Thaad systems is evident at US bases in the UAE and Jordan.
It's unclear what the cost of that damage was.
The degradation of these systems reportedly led the US to redeploy Thaad components from South Korea to the Middle East. The damage from Iran's retaliatory strikes account for a fraction of the overall costs to the US for the war
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