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European Tech Sovereignty
10JUN

Sentinel-2 catches 33 IRGC boats off Kargan

2 min read
10:31UTC

A Sentinel-2 satellite frame on Thursday 23 April recorded approximately 33 IRGC fast-attack craft north of the Strait of Hormuz, the conflict's largest single-frame concentration.

TechnologyDeveloping
Key takeaway

Two 33s in the same waters, same week: the Hormuz balance sheet is now legible to anyone with Copernicus access.

A Sentinel-2 satellite image dated Thursday 23 April recorded approximately 33 IRGC fast-attack craft sailing north of the Strait of Hormuz near Kargan, the largest documented single-frame fast-attack concentration of the conflict. Sentinel-2 is the European Space Agency's Copernicus optical-imagery constellation, openly licensed and routinely used by maritime OSINT. IRGC is the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps, the parallel branch of Iran's armed forces that runs the small-craft swarming doctrine in the strait.

CENTCOM's vessel-redirection count sat at 33 ships on 25 April, two days after the Sentinel-2 frame. The two thirty-threes describe the same contested water from opposite sides. The Kargan concentration is the operational baseline against which CENTCOM's enforcement is being measured; the redirection count is the visible CENTCOM half of the same equation.

Kargan sits on the Iranian Gulf coast, north of the strait's main southbound shipping channel and within unrefuelled small-craft range of the Hormuz traffic separation scheme. A 33-craft single-frame concentration is consistent with either a forward-swarming readiness posture or a routine repositioning under the IRGC's Friday 24 April end-of-self-restraint declaration . Without follow-on imagery from the next pass, the satellite frame cannot distinguish between the two. The same waters now hold the USS Abraham Lincoln strike group on the US side.

Deep Analysis

In plain English

The **IRGC** (Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps) uses small, fast patrol boats as one of its main naval tactics. These boats are cheap, fast and hard to stop with large warships because they can swarm in large numbers. A European satellite called Sentinel-2 photographed 33 of these boats gathered in one area just north of the Strait of Hormuz on 23 April. The boats are near an island called Kargan, which is close enough to the main shipping channel that they could reach it without needing to refuel. The day after the photograph was taken, Iran's Revolutionary Guard formally announced it was no longer holding back from attacking US allies in the region. The 33-boat concentration and the declaration together describe an Iranian force posture that is ready to act.

What could happen next?
  • Meaning

    If the IRGC deployed a 33-craft swarm against a carrier battle group under the rules of engagement implied by the verbal shoot-kill order, the engagement would exceed the defensive capacity of a single destroyer escort, potentially requiring carrier air wing involvement and producing the conflict's first major kinetic exchange.

    Short term · Assessed
  • Meaning

    The Sentinel-2 image provides open-source confirmation of the concentration, meaning **CENTCOM** cannot deny awareness of the threat posture; any kinetic exchange following the image would occur under conditions where the intelligence basis for the fast-attack capability was publicly documented.

    Short term · Assessed
  • Meaning

    The 33-craft figure, coinciding numerically with CENTCOM's 33-vessel interception count, is the kind of symbolic alignment that IRGC information operations exploit: the proximity of the numbers will be used in Iranian state media regardless of whether the coincidence is operational or statistical.

    Short term · Assessed
First Reported In

Update #80 · Three carriers, zero instruments

Army Recognition / The War Zone· 26 Apr 2026
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