Trump says Israel sent agents into Iran’s Fordow nuclear site to confirm ‘total obliteration’
President Trump is adamant US strikes wiped out Iran’s nuclear facilities and set the program back decades — despite a leaked report suggesting Tehran could salvage it within months.
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Donald Trump revealed that Israel sent agents to Iran’s bombed nuclear sites to confirm their “total obliteration” — while insisting his surprise attack was too quick for Tehran to have removed its uranium.
President Trump was adamant the strikes wiped out Iran’s nuclear facilities and set the program back decades — despite a leaked preliminary intelligence assessment suggesting Tehran could salvage it within months.
“Israel is doing a report on it now, I understand, and I was told that they said it was total obliteration,” Mr Trump told reporters at the NATO summit in the Netherlands on Wednesday, The New York Post reports.
“You know they have guys that go in there after the hit, and they said it was total obliteration,” he continued, adding, “I believe it was total obliteration.”
He insisted Iran wouldn’t have been able to remove the uranium being enriched at the sites before he gave the order to drop the barrage of massive bunker-buster bombs on the three sites.
“They didn’t have a chance to get anything out because we acted fast. If it would have taken two weeks, maybe. But it’s very hard to remove that kind of material, very hard and very dangerous for them to remove it,” Mr Trump said.
“Plus they knew we were coming, and if they know we’re coming, they’re not going to be down there.”
He argued, too, that the strikes had set Iran’s nuclear ambitions back “basically decades” — but wouldn’t rule out launching another attack if Tehran tried to rebuild its program.
“The last thing they want to do is enrich anything right now. They want to recover, and we won’t let that happen,” he said.
“Number one, militarily, we won’t. I think we’ll end up having somewhat of a relationship with Iran. I see it. Look, I’ve had a relationship over the last four days. They agreed to the ceasefire, and it was a very equal agreement. They both said that’s enough.”
10 NUCLEAR WARHEADS
But experts warn a covert nuclear facility buried deep under a mountain south of Iran’s destroyed Natanz enrichment plant could house enough uranium for 10 nuclear warheads.
The underground nuclear site – thought to be buried more than 100m under the Kolang Gaz La mountain – would be comfortably beyond the range of US bunker busters used in Sunday’s strikes and has the floorspace for centrifuges required for weapons-grade uranium enrichment.
The International Atomic Energy Agency confirmed that it had lost track of 408.6gm of 60 per cent enriched uranium, while satellite images appear to show assets being moved outside the Fordow facility in the days leading up to the strikes.
Technical director of SMR Nuclear technology Tony Irwin said if 200 of the estimated 15,000 centrifuges at Natanz plant remained operational, the missing uranium could be enriched to 90 per cent in a matter of weeks – the equivalent of 10 warheads.
“The uranium would have come out of the centrifuge as a gas, uranium hexafluoride, it’s then put into a cylinder … They would have been able to get 400kg in just a few small cylinders,” he said.
“They’re transported worldwide all the time like this, so there’s absolutely no problem getting about four cylinders on the back of a truck and moving it to another location.”
The Australian nuclear engineer said the speed of Iran’s recovery hinged on whether crucial deconversion plants had been terminally damaged during the attacks.
“Certainly it could only take a few months if they have a deconversion plant … but if they’ve got to start constructing that and putting it together, I mean that’s going to take the rest of the year to do that at least,” he said.
The Institute for Science and International Security, which has been monitoring the construction process at Pickaxe Mountain, said it was difficult to discern whether the facility was operational.
“Given that Iran has deployed about 6000 advanced centrifuges at Fordow and the Natanz Fuel Enrichment Plant (FEP) over the last year, all produced outside of International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) monitoring, Iran appears capable of secretly deploying a few thousand advanced centrifuges,” it said in its most recent update.
Deakin University Global Islamic Politics chair Professor Greg Barton said it was conceivable the missing uranium and a large array of centrifuges had been relocated prior to America’s strikes.
“The hope with the B-2 Fordow strike was that one single strike would cripple Iran’s nuclear weapons production and set it back years,” he said.
“It now looks like that was just wishful thinking and the operation hasn’t set them back that far.
“The hope that military action alone could deal with Iran’s nuclear weapons program was mistaken, it is pretty clear in hindsight that the best method of slowing down Iran’s progress was the JCPLA agreement.”
The IAEA, which has not inspected the Pickaxe Mountain site, lost track of a large number of centrifuge components when President Donald Trump withdrew from the Iran nuclear deal in 2018.
The Iranian parliament launched preliminary steps to suspend co-operation with the UN’s nuclear watchdog, considering barring inspections and refusing to submit reports.
While the general outline of the bill has been approved, parliament has not yet fully signed off on the move.
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Originally published as Trump says Israel sent agents into Iran’s Fordow nuclear site to confirm ‘total obliteration’
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