American newspaper confirms Iranian missiles destroyed 'Israeli' military facilities

According to the IRGC, 90 percent of the missiles hit their intended targets, avoiding the regime's missile systems, which has been boasting that it has great military capabilities.

American newspaper confirms Iranian missiles destroyed 'Israeli' military facilities

The Washington Post has confirmed that several military and "security" facilities of the Israeli regime were badly damaged by missiles fired by Iran during a recent retaliatory operation.

Reporting on Friday, the daily newspaper said that photos and images show that more than 24 missiles have targeted and destroyed at least three important military and intelligence sites of the regime.

The newspaper has confirmed that more than 24 missiles targeted the Nevatim Air Force Base, in the south of the Negev desert, and three more missiles landed in the Tel Nof military camp in the middle of the occupied territories .

Likewise, the Washington Post has written that at least two missiles also landed near the headquarters of the Zionist regime's intelligence agency, Mossad, in Tel Aviv.

F-35 aircraft. Reports say that Iranian missiles have destroyed several planes of this type that were parked at the Nevatim Military Airport.

 

The report said: " Analysts have told the Washington Post that the examined images show that the missiles targeted the areas directly and not the remains of the fired missiles."

The newspaper has written that Iran's missiles may have caused more damage than reported.

The Zionist regime of Israel and the United States, however, have claimed that the missiles have caused "minor damage" while the Israeli army has also claimed that its military and intelligence bases are "functioning as usual. "

The report came after the Islamic Republic fired hundreds of missiles at military and intelligence bases of the illegal Israeli regime in Operation True Promise II on Tuesday in retaliation for the killing of senior Hamas martyr Ismail Haniya, Hizbullah leader Sayyid Hassan Nasrallah and the high-ranking commander of the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps, IRGC Abbas Nilforoushan .