CENTCOM released video on 5 March showing two Iranian warships destroyed at their berths in Chah Bahar, on Iran's southeast coast: the IRIS Shahid Sayyad Shirazi, a Soleimani-class corvette, filmed ablaze and sinking at pier, and an unnamed Jamaran-class corvette, also struck and sunk dockside. Combined with the IRIS Dena — torpedoed by a US submarine south of Sri Lanka in the first confirmed US torpedo kill of an enemy warship since 1945 — three Iranian naval vessels have now been identified by name or class. The Pentagon has claimed 20 warships sunk . These are the first three independently confirmed.
The gap between three confirmed and twenty claimed is where credibility is contested. Iran's regular navy operates roughly six frigates and corvettes alongside fast-attack craft; the IRGC Navy adds several hundred smaller vessels. If the twenty-ship figure is accurate, it would represent the heaviest naval losses any state has absorbed since the Falklands War in 1982. The Shahid Sayyad Shirazi belongs to Iran's newest domestically built corvette class, commissioned from 2023 — its destruction at berth means one of the navy's most modern platforms was eliminated before it could sortie.
The Chah Bahar strikes carry a distinct tactical signature. Both vessels were destroyed dockside — unable to deploy, unable to defend. Chah Bahar is also the port India has invested in as a trade corridor to Afghanistan bypassing Pakistan, a detail that widens the strike's diplomatic resonance beyond the immediate naval loss. Striking warships in port rather than at sea eliminates the ambiguity of open-ocean engagement and produces imagery that is unambiguous from satellite or close-range video.
Under Iran's internet blackout — now in its sixth day at 1% of normal capacity — independent verification of most Pentagon claims is impossible. The three confirmed sinkings validate a fraction of the US account. The remaining seventeen exist in an information vacuum where neither confirmation nor refutation is currently available. For diplomatic audiences weighing the scale and proportionality of the campaign, the ratio of verified to claimed losses matters as much as the operational damage itself.
