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.
