U.S. intelligence assessments indicate that Iran has retained a substantial share of its missile forces, despite claims by President Donald Trump’s administration that Tehran’s military capacity had been destroyed, The New York Times reported.

According to the newspaper, Iran still has roughly 70% of its mobile launchers deployed across the country. A similar share of its prewar missile arsenal also remains intact.

The report pays particular attention to the area around the Strait of Hormuz. The NYT says Iran has restored operational access to 30 of 33 missile sites in that zone, a development the newspaper describes as a threat to U.S. warships.

Satellite imagery also undercuts the idea that Iran’s missile infrastructure has been completely dismantled. Military intelligence cited by the publication suggests Tehran has regained access to nearly 90% of its underground storage facilities and launch sites nationwide. Those facilities are now assessed as either partially or fully ready for use.

The newspaper had previously reported that, during the conflict, the United States came close to exhausting its stockpiles of stealth cruise missiles, fired a decade’s worth of Tomahawks, and used up Patriot interceptor missiles equal to two years of production.

Against that backdrop, Trump said on May 11 that the current ceasefire in the conflict with Iran was extremely fragile and in a very weak condition.