Mapping the Israel-Iran Conflict
June 20, 2025, 5:23 p.m. ET
Ashley CaiAlbert Sun and Lazaro Gamio
U.S. bases or sites with recent U.S. military presence
Iran
Israel
Iraq
Syria
Saudi Arabia
Kuw.
U.A.E.
Qatar
Bahrain
Oman
Egypt
Jordan
Djibouti
Turkey
Up to 435 miles
Up to 1,240 miles
Source: CSIS Missile Defense Project
Note: Minimum range estimates for Iran’s missiles are shown.
Thousands of U.S. troops in the Middle East are stationed at bases within range of an Iranian missile strike. Iranian officials have acknowledged that the country would attack U.S. bases in the Middle East if the United States joined Israel’s war.
Many of Iran’s missile launchers are mobile, allowing them to be positioned in more advantageous locations and maximizing the country’s firing range.
The complete picture of Iran’s missile stockpile is murky, but a 2022 estimate stated that the country had more than 3,000 missiles of varying ranges. At the start of the war, some Israeli officials estimated that there were around 2,000 missiles in Iranian stockpiles.
Some of these missiles have a range of up to 2,000 kilometers, which could easily cover the 1,400 kilometers separating Iran and Israel. Many U.S. bases are within striking distance of missiles with shorter ranges.
Israeli officials estimate that between a third to half of Iran’s stockpile is gone, used up by missile launches or having been destroyed in Israeli strikes. By Wednesday morning, Iran had fired roughly 400 missiles. Iran has begun to fire far fewer missiles in its barrages, possibly indicating that it is rationing its munitions.
June 19, 2025, 3:23 p.m. ET
A satellite image shows damage at the Arak nuclear site. The main react is hit, along with three other structures.
Distillation
towers hit
Building
destroyed
Nuclear
reactor struck
Distillation
towers hit
Building
destroyed
Nuclear
reactor struck
Source: Satellite imagery from Maxar Technologies
Israel said it targeted Iran’s Arak heavy water reactor site on Thursday morning “to prevent the reactor from being restored and used for nuclear weapons development.”
The Israeli military posted a video of the strike on social media, showing several explosions.
The site had been one of Iran’s key nuclear facilities, once thought to produce weapons-grade plutonium. But as part of the Obama administration’s 2015 nuclear deal with Iran, the site was retired and concrete poured into the core of the reactor.
Before the strike, the Israel Defense Forces issued an evacuation order on X for an area around the site.
Source: Israeli military
By Elena Shao
Iranian state media reported that there had been no serious damage, no casualties and no radiation leak as a result of the strike at Arak.
The International Atomic Energy Agency, the United Nations nuclear watchdog, confirmed that there were no radiological effects from the attack.
June 18, 2025, 11:15 p.m. ET
Note: Local time is shown.
Source: Internet Outage Detection and Analysis
A near-total internet blackout that began in Iran on Wednesday evening essentially prevented Iranians from communicating with the outside world, as Israeli military strikes hit the country for a sixth day.
Connectivity to the global internet dropped to about 3 percent in Iran at around 5:30 p.m. local time, according to data from the Internet Outage Detection and Analysis project at the Georgia Institute of Technology that monitors internet outages worldwide. There was a short-lived recovery a few hours later, followed by a quick return to a near-complete shutdown, the data showed.
The shutdown appeared to be the result of an internal decision rather than a consequence of an Israeli strike. Earlier in the week, the Tasnim news agency, affiliated with Iran’s Revolutionary Guards, had said that Iran would disconnect from the global internet on Tuesday night, and that Iranians could still use a national internet service that allows people to message on government-approved platforms.
Experts and citizens say that the government is likely throttling internet access to prevent people from sharing information about where Israel has struck and for fear of Israeli cyberattacks.
Residents in Iran have reported severe disruptions to internet and phone services since the war began. Internet connectivity deteriorated slightly, by about ten percent, in the first five days following Israel’s initial strikes on Iran last Friday.
Iranian officials told The New York Times on Tuesday that services had been restricted in an effort to combat Israeli operatives that they said were still carrying out covert operations. The claim could not be independently verified.
Since the blackout started, reaching people by phone inside the country has become extremely difficult and many news media sites have stopped updating. The disruptions may be affecting residents’ ability to see evacuation notices, including ones that the Israeli military has posted on social media ahead of strikes inside Iran.
Iran’s state broadcaster on Tuesday urged people to delete WhatsApp from their phones, claiming that the messaging app was collecting user information to aid Israel. WhatsApp said the allegations were false.
June 18, 2025, 6:12 p.m. ET
Israel has expanded its attacks on Iran’s densely populated capital city, in recent days warning many of Tehran’s residents to evacuate ahead of strikes.
Higher
Population density: Lower
Evacuation areas
named by Israel
Tajrish
Qods
Tehran
Mehrabad
International
Airport
Map
extent
Iran
5mi
Population density: Lower
Higher
Evacuation areas
named by Israel
Tajrish
Tehran
Mehrabad
International
Airport
Map
extent
Iran
Eslamshahr
5mi
Source: 2025 Global Human Settlement Layer provided by the European Space Agency.
By The New York Times
With around 10 million people within its nearly 300 square miles, according to the C.I.A. World Factbook, Tehran is comparable in density to New York City. About one in 10 Iranians lives in Tehran proper, and millions more live in its greater metropolitan area.
Photos and videos taken in the capital in recent days show long lines of cars at gas stations and congested traffic on the roads as people try to flee. The sense of fear escalated on Monday evening after the Israeli military issued an evacuation order for a zone in District 3, a densely populated upscale residential center of several hundred thousand people. Hours later, President Trump also warned in a Truth Social post that the entire population of Tehran should “immediately evacuate.”
And on Tuesday, the fifth day of back-and-forth attacks, the Israeli military issued another evacuation warning for an area that covered part of District 18. That district is just south of the Mehrabad International Airport, and is one of the poorest neighborhoods in Tehran.
The Israeli military said that it had targeted military and critical energy infrastructure, particularly the facilities and resources Iran needs to build nuclear weapons. The New York Times verified strikes in both dense residential areas, including the cities of Tabriz and Mashhad, and less populated areas, like Natanz, which is home to Iran’s largest uranium enrichment center.
June 18, 2025, 2:42 p.m. ET
About 40,000 U.S. troops are currently stationed across the Middle East.
Long-term U.S. military bases
Other military sites with recent U.S. military presence
Kuwait Five installations are located here. They can hold more than 13,500 troops.
Al Udeid Air Base U.S. Central Command regional headquarters can accommodate more than 10,000 troops.
Al Asad Air Base Many of the approximately 2,500 U.S. troops in Iraq are located at this Iraqi base.
Al Asad Air Base Many of the approximately 2,500 U.S. troops in Iraq are located at this Iraqi base.
Iran
Iran
Israel
Iraq
Syria
Saudi Arabia
Afghanistan
U.A.E.
Turkmenistan
Qat.
Bahrain
Oman
Yemen
Egypt
Egypt
Sudan
Jordan
Djibouti
Eritrea
Turkey
Tehran
Tel Aviv
Source: Congressional Research Service
Note: Troop numbers and locations are approximate and fluctuate.
By Daniel Wood and Lazaro Gamio
Thousands of American troops could be in Iran’s direct line of fire if President Trump joins Israel in attacking Tehran’s nuclear program and military, as he said on Wednesday he might or might not do. Experts expect that if Mr. Trump orders the American military to directly participate in Israel’s bombing campaign, Iran will quickly retaliate against U.S. troops stationed across the Middle East.
More than 40,000 active-duty U.S. troops and civilians are working for the Pentagon in the Middle East, and billions of dollars in weapons and military equipment are stored there. See the locations of major long-term bases and other sites above, and read more about the U.S. troop presence in the region at the link below.
June 18, 2025, 10:26 a.m. ET
Missile facilities
Nuclear facilities
Energy facilities
TURKMENISTAN
Caspian
Sea
Tabriz
Mashhad
Tehran
Most of the attacks so far have occurred in the western part of the country, where the largest number of facilities and cities are located.
Kermanshah
Natanz
AFGHANISTAN
IRAQ
Isfahan
IRAN
Kerman
Shiraz
KUWAIT
Bandar Abbas
SAUDI ARABIA
Persian
Gulf
QATAR
100 miles
U.A.E
TURKMENISTAN
Caspian
Sea
Tabriz
Mashhad
Tehran
Most of the attacks so far have occurred in the western part of the country, where the largest number of facilities and cities are located.
Kermanshah
Natanz
IRAQ
Isfahan
IRAN
AFG.
Kerman
Shiraz
KUWAIT
Bandar Abbas
SAUDI ARABIA
Persian
Gulf
QATAR
200 miles
U.A.E
TURKMENISTAN
Caspian
Sea
Tabriz
Tehran
Mashhad
IRAN
Kermanshah
Natanz
AFG.
IRAQ
Isfahan
Kerman
Shiraz
KUW.
Bandar Abbas
SAUDI
ARABIA
Persian
Gulf
250 miles
U.A.E
Most of the attacks so far have occurred in the western part of the country, where the largest number of facilities and cities are located.
Sources: Nuclear Threat Initiative, International Atomic Energy Agency, Global Oil and Gas Features Database, New York Times analysis of satellite imagery from Airbus, Maxar Technologies and Planet Labs, local news reports, and verified social photos and videos
The International Atomic Energy Agency said Wednesday that Israel struck two centrifuge production facilities in Iran, the latest hit to the country’s nuclear and missile infrastructure amid ongoing strikes that began last Friday.
Earlier attacks severely damaged Iran’s largest uranium enrichment center at Natanz. On Tuesday, the I.A.E.A. — the nuclear watchdog of the United Nations — confirmed “direct impacts” on the site’s underground enrichment halls.
The Israeli military also struck laboratories that work to convert uranium gas back into a metal — one of the last stages of building a weapon — at a complex outside the ancient capital of Isfahan where Iran’s most likely repository of near bomb-grade nuclear fuel is stored. The stockpile has so far been spared from attack.
Iranian missile capability has also been degraded by the strikes. Israel said it struck 12 missile launch sites and storage facilities on Tuesday alone.
See a more detailed look at the damage to strategic infrastructure at the link below.
Israel has attacked nuclear, military and energy facilities in Iran. Here is a look at the destruction so far.
June 17, 2025, 12:45 p.m. ET
Lazaro Gamio and Karen Yourish
TURKMEnistan
Caspian
Sea
Tabriz
Tehran
Iran
AfgHAN.
IrAQ
KUWAIT
Pak.
Bandar
Abbas
Persian
Gulf
Strait of
Hormuz
SAUDI
ARABIA
QATAR
Gulf of Oman
U.A.E.
250 miles
OMAN
TURKEY
TURKMEnistan
Caspian
Sea
Tabriz
Tehran
Afghanistan
Iran
IrAQ
Isfahan
KUWAIT
Pakistan
Bandar
Abbas
Persian
Gulf
Strait of
Hormuz
QATAR
Gulf of Oman
SAUDI
ARABIA
U.A.E.
250 miles
OMAN
Source: Nuclear Threat Initiative
The New York Times
Iranian officials have long asserted that their country’s nuclear program is intended solely for peaceful purposes, such as energy production and scientific research. But revelations in the early 2000s about undisclosed nuclear facilities, and work done up until 2003 on the design and delivery of nuclear weapons, led many nations to conclude that the country was walking to the threshold of becoming a nuclear weapons state.
Iran operates more than 30 facilities around the country that carry out different steps of the nuclear fuel cycle, including uranium enrichment, according to the Nuclear Threat Initiative. Tehran insists that its enrichment program is meant only to produce fuel for nuclear reactors.
Uranium enriched at low levels can be used as fuel for civilian purposes. Highly enriched uranium is used to make nuclear bombs, and Iran’s enrichment facilities (at Natanz and Fordo) contain advanced centrifuges capable of enriching uranium to high levels.
More than a dozen other facilities produce, test or house missiles, or otherwise support Iran’s missile program.
In 2015, President Barack Obama negotiated an agreement to limit Iran’s nuclear ability and to require monitoring and reporting requirements in return for lifting international oil and financial sanctions.
President Trump withdrew from the deal in 2018, saying it was not tough enough.
Late last month, the United States presented its first formal proposal to Tehran for elements of a new nuclear deal. The U.S. offer came hours after United Nations inspectors reported a major surge over the previous three months in the size of Iran’s stockpile of near-bomb-grade uranium. It proposed permitting Iran to continue to enrich uranium at low levels until an international consortium began manufacturing fuel for customers around the Middle East. President Trump said Iran appeared to have rejected the plan to ultimately stop it from enriching uranium on Iranian soil.
David E. Sanger contributed reporting.
June 17, 2025, 12:45 p.m. ET
Image
Credit...Arash Khamooshi for The New York Times
After Israel launched a surprise assault on Iran on Friday, confrontation between the two countries has escalated over four days, with neither side showing signs of heeding international calls for restraint. Here is a recounting, with maps, videos and photos, of the major developments in the first few days of the conflict.
In the early hours of Friday, Israel launched several waves of strikes at Iran, attacking military targets including nuclear sites and top commanders. The strikes prompted a retaliatory barrage of missiles from Iran, which struck at least seven sites around Tel Aviv.
Iran reported on Friday that 78 people had been killed and hundreds injured. Among the dead were two high-ranking military officers, Maj. Gen. Mohammad Bagheri and Gen. Hossein Salam, and senior nuclear scientists.
The New York Times
Israel attacked Iran’s premier nuclear enrichment site at Natanz, about 140 miles south of Tehran, destroying the site’s aboveground plant and main electricity infrastructure.
Area damaged
in later strike
Damaged and
destroyed
buildings
Destroyed by Israel
in 2020
N
Area damaged
in later strike
Damaged and
destroyed
buildings
Destroyed by Israel
in 2020
N
Synthetic aperture radar image from Umbra Lab
By Bora Erden and Christoph Koettl
In the early afternoon, Israel carried out a strike on a military airport in the northwest Iranian city of Tabriz. A witness video verified by The New York Times shows large plumes of black smoke rising into the sky from the airport.
Video
CreditCredit...Verified social media, via Reuters
A section of a multistory residential building near Nobonyad Square, in northeastern Tehran, collapsed after it was struck, according to videos of the immediate aftermath that were verified by The Times.
Iran’s retaliatory strikes hit the Kirya area in central Tel Aviv, which is home to a number of government and military facilities, including the headquarters of the Israel Defense Forces. Several buildings in the area were damaged.
170 ft.
Israel Defense Forces
headquarters
Israeli military
compound
The windows of a building
inside the Kirya government
complex were shattered.
Da Vinci Towers
apartment complex
170 ft.
Israel Defense Forces
headquarters
Israeli military
compound
The windows of a building
inside the Kirya government
complex were shattered.
Eliezer Kaplan St.
Da Vinci Towers
apartment
complex
Sources: Aerial image by Airbus via Google Earth; Photos by AFP via Getty images (left) and the Associated Press (right)
By Samuel Granados
Overnight, the Israeli military struck sections of Mehrabad International Airport in Tehran, and videos verified by The Times show thick black smoke billowing from the airport’s military hangars.
Video
CreditCredit...The New York Times
An Iranian missile landed in a residential area of Rishon LeZion, south of Tel Aviv. A video taken later shows extensive damage to homes there.
On Saturday evening, Israel intensified its attack on critical energy infrastructure in Iran, widening its military campaign. Drones targeted a section of the South Pars Gas Field in Bushehr Province, one of the world’s largest gas fields and a critical part of Iran’s energy production.
Later, Israel took out two major energy facilities in Tehran: the Shahran fuel and gasoline depot and Shahr Rey, one of the country’s largest oil refineries. A video verified by The Times shows the Shahran depot ablaze.
Video
CreditCredit...WANA, via Reuters
Iranian missile barrages on Israel killed at least eight people overnight, including four in the city of Bat Yam, south of Tel Aviv, where a blast heavily damaged a multistory apartment complex.
Israel bombarded Tehran in a rare daytime assault on Sunday afternoon.
Image
Smoke from explosions after Israel’s attacks on Tehran on Sunday. Credit...Arash Khamooshi for The New York Times
Israel said it had also struck an airport in Mashhad.
Iran’s health ministry reported that at least 224 people had been killed and more than 1,400 injured. Israel’s death toll was at least 24, with roughly 600 injured, according to the Israeli government.
Early Monday morning, the Israeli military warned residents in several areas of an imminent Iranian attack and urged them to remain near shelters and safe rooms. Iran struck a residential block in Petach Tikva, in central Israel, killing at least four people, officials said.
Iranian missiles also hit Israel’s largest oil refinery, located in Haifa Bay in northern Israel, according to footage verified by The Times.
The Israeli military claimed it had attacked the elite Quds Force’s command center in Tehran, though the claims could not be verified independently.
The Israeli military later published an announcement on social media telling people in a densely populated residential district of northeastern Tehran to evacuate, saying it planned to target military infrastructure there.
By Daniel Wood
Hours later, Israel struck the offices of Iran’s state broadcaster, the Islamic Republic of Iran Broadcasting, which is in the same district. Video feeds, verified by The Times, show the headquarters of the broadcaster burning and thick pillars of smoke rising from the building.
Video
CreditCredit...Iranian State TV, via Associated Press
Israel launched a series of strikes against Iran, targeting the country’s nuclear program and other military infrastructure. Iran launched its own strikes in retaliation.
June 16, 2025, 6:47 p.m. ET
Helene CooperEric Schmitt and Samuel Granados
News Analysis
Fordo nuclear site
Deep inside a mountain,
Fordo is said to contain close
to 3,000 sophisticated centrifuges
in two enrichment halls.
IRAN
Support
building
Tunnel
entrances
Security perimeter
Fordo nuclear site
IRAN
Deep inside a mountain,
Fordo is said to contain close
to 3,000 sophisticated centrifuges
in two enrichment halls.
Support
building
Tunnel
entrances
Security perimeter
Fordo nuclear site
Deep inside a mountain,
Fordo is said to contain close
to 3,000 sophisticated centrifuges
in two enrichment halls.
IRAN
Support
building
Tunnel
entrances
Security perimeter
Sources: Nuclear Threat Initiative; Google Earth (terrain)
Iran’s most heavily fortified nuclear site, Fordo, was built deep inside a mountain to protect it from an attack. Only the U.S. military has the 30,000-pound bomb capable of even reaching it.
The bomb is commonly known as a “bunker buster” because it is designed to destroy deep underground bunkers, or well-buried weapons in highly protected facilities. It is believed to be the only air-delivered weapon that would have a chance of destroying the site.
The bomb has a much thicker steel case and contains a smaller amount of explosives than similarly sized general-purpose bombs. The heavy casings allow the munition to stay intact as it punches through soil, rock or concrete before detonating.
Its size — 20 feet long and 30,000 pounds — means that only the American B-2 stealth bomber can carry it.
Conventional wisdom has been that Israel can’t destroy Fordo on its own. The United States has blocked Israel from getting the bunker buster, and while Israel has fighter jets, it has not developed heavy bombers capable of carrying the weapon.
But Israel can come close by hitting more accessible power generation and transmission plants that help run the facility, which contains Iran’s most advanced centrifuges, military officials said.
In conjunction with Israel’s aerial bombardment of Iran, going after the Fordo-adjacent plants could significantly slow down the ability of Iran’s most protected nuclear facility to keep enriching uranium.
The Israel Defense Forces and covert operatives could also look for other ways to disable the site, including destroying the entrance to it.
Attacking Fordo is central to any effort to destroy Iran’s ability to make nuclear weapons.In March 2023, the International Atomic Energy Agency reported that it had discovered uranium that had been enriched to 83.7 percent purity in Fordo — close to the enrichment level, 90 percent, necessary for nuclear weapons.
Iran, which is a signatory to the Nuclear Nonproliferation Treaty, has maintained that its nuclear program is for peaceful purposes.
The U.S. Air Force is moving refueling tankers, aircraft and additional warplanesto support any additional American operations in the Middle East, U.S. officials said.
But President Trump has not, at the moment, moved to reverse years of American policy on providing Israel with the bunker buster bombs.
“We’ve had a policy for a long time of not providing those to the Israelis because we didn’t want them to use them,” said Gen. Joseph Votel, who was commander of U.S. Central Command during Mr. Trump’s first term. Instead, the United States viewed its bunker buster bomb largely as a deterrent, a national security asset possessed only by America, but not one that, if made available, might encourage Israel to start a war with Iran.
Iran built the centrifuge facility at Fordo knowing that it needed to bury it deep to prevent it from being attacked. In 1981, using F-15 and F-16 fighter jets, Israel bombed a nuclear facility near Baghdad as part of its effort to stop Iraq from acquiring nuclear weapons. That facility was above ground.
“The Iranians fully understood that the Israelis would try to get inside their programs and they built Fordo inside of a mountain a long time ago to take care of the post-Iraq problem” presented by the 1981 strike, said Vali Nasr, an Iran expert who is a professor at Johns Hopkins University.
Over the years, the Israelis have cooked up a variety of plans to attack Fordo in the absence of U.S.-supplied bunker busters. Under one of those plans, which they presented to senior officials in the Obama administration, Israeli helicopters loaded with commandos would fly to the site. The commandos would then fight their way inside the facility, rig it with explosives and blow it up, former U.S. officials said.
Israel successfully mounted a similar operation in Syria last year when it destroyed a Hezbollah missile production facility.
But Fordo would be a much more dangerous endeavor, military officials said.
American officials say now that Israel has gained air supremacy over much of Iran, Israeli attack planes could circle over Fordo and render it inoperable, at least temporarily, but not destroy it.
“The Israelis have sprung a lot of clandestine operations lately, but the physics of the problem remain the same,” said Gen. Kenneth F. McKenzie Jr., who was in charge of the Iran war plans when he ran the Pentagon’s Central Command after General Votel. “It remains a very difficult target.”
David A. Deptula, a retired three-star Air Force general who planned the American air campaigns in Afghanistan in 2001 and in the 1991 Persian Gulf War, agreed that Israel has options that would not require American help.
For example, Israeli special forces “could insert/apply or otherwise use a variety of means to disable the facility,” he said.
Yechiel Leiter, Israel’s ambassador to the United States, hinted at those options on Sunday on ABC News’s “This Week.”
“We have a number of contingencies, which will enable us to deal with Fordo,” he said. “Not everything is a matter of taking to the skies and bombing from afar.”
Even if Mr. Trump were to authorize American B-2 stealth bombers to drop the 30,000-pound bombs, General McKenzie said, there would be several technical, highly classified challenges in coordinating such a strike with Israel.
A decision to use the American bunker busters would also have huge international consequences, General Votel said. For one, there could be nuclear contamination from such a bombardment that could endanger civilians.
“I think there would also certainly be fallout internationally over the idea that the United States joined Israel in what would be viewed as an illegal attack on the sovereignty of Iran,” General Votel added.
And Iran could widen its retaliation to U.S. troops and other American targets in the region and beyond, military analysts say. The United States would be back on war footing in the region.
Mr. Trump has made clear that he has little interest in more military misadventures in the region, and he is seeking not to alienate a noninterventionist wing of supporters firmly opposed to more U.S. involvement in a Middle East war.
Adam Entous contributed reporting.
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