First images show stunning impact of US bunker buster bomb strike
The first satellite images of Iran’s Fordow nuclear enrichment site show the extensive damage caused by America’s bunker buster bombs.
The first satellite images from Iran’s Fordow nuclear enrichment site show that part of the mountain protecting the facility was completely obliterated by US bunker buster bomb strikes Saturday, as experts say it appears at least part of the underground structures have collapsed.
Possible bomb entry points and rubble was visible following President Trump’s surprise B-2 stealth bomber attack, the images taken by Maxar Technologies show.
The once-brown mountainside turned gray in parts, with the entire topography of the area changed by the detonation of 14 13,600kg Massive Ordinance Penetrator (MOP) bombs.
Light gray smoke also appears to be hanging in the air over the site, around 160km south of Tehran, the images show.
“The topography has changed. You can see areas in the post-blast photo using the building as your marker,” the Atlantic Council’s Alex Plitsas told The Post.
“If you look from that to the right compared to the historic photo, you can see where areas are now flat, so it’s clear that whatever was underneath had collapsed.”
Other high-resolution satellite images suggest Iran sealed up the tunnel entrances at Fordow before the attack.
An artery of roads lead to the facility, with pre-images showing many vehicles lined up close to the entry points.
The Fordow site suffered “major damage” in the strike along with a second site in Esfahan, while the nuclear site in Natanz has been destroyed, sources told the Jerusalem Post on Sunday.
Tehran is yet to issue a damage assessment of the site.
Iran reportedly evacuated Fordow some time ago, according to state TV.
“The enriched uranium reserves had been transferred from the nuclear centres and there are no materials left there that, if targeted, would cause radiation and be harmful to our compatriots,” Hassan Abedini, deputy political head of Iran’s state broadcaster, said following the attack, according to Reuters.
Fordow is buried deep under a mountain near the city of Qom, meaning the tactics deployed by the US and Israel were to cause a cave-in or subsidence onto the site, according to military sources.
Israel lacked the ordnance to take out Fordow on its own in the short term, which is why the US GBU-57, carried out by US B-2 bombers, was requested, according to Heather Williams from the Center for Strategic and International Studies.
The GBU-57 is capable of penetrating up to 60m underground before exploding.
Developed in the early 2000s, it can even go through rock or concrete before the warhead explodes.
Further photos show before and after satellite images of the attack on the Isfahan nuclear site.
Aerial pictures show several buildings completely obliterated at the site near Iran’s second-largest city.
This article was originally published by the New York Post and reproduced with permission