
Satellite images show work ongoing at Iran's Fordow nuclear site bombed by US: Report
The satellite images were released by Maxar Technologies on Sunday and they contradict the claims made by the Trump administration. 'The images reveal ongoing activity at and near the ventilation shafts and holes caused by last week's airstrikes on the Fordow fuel enrichment complex,' said Maxar.
The images by Maxar detailed that activities had started at Fordow nuclear plant and an excavator and several personnel were seen positioned next to the northern shaft on the bridge which is above the ground complex. A crane is seen in the satellite images operating at the entrance of the shaft.
Maxar Technologies stated that multiple vehicles were also visible in the images below the ridge and are parked along the path which was built to access the nuclear plant.
The United States launched 'Operation Midnight Hammer' on June 22 which involved 125 aircrafts, including B-2 Stealth bombers and targeted Iran's three nuclear facilities: Fordo, Natanz and Isfahan. The US military dropped more than a dozen bunker-buster bombs on Iran's Fordow and Natanz nuclear sites, while the US submarine hit Isfahan site in central Iran with Tomahawk missiles.
A statement by Dan Caine, Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, said the US Massive Ordnance Penetrator (MOP) bombs targeted the two ventilation shafts at Fordow. At a Pentagon press briefing, Caine said 'most of the bombs dropped at Fordow were tasked to enter the main shaft, move down into the complex at greater than 1,000 feet per second, and explode in the mission space.'
President Trump, while addressing the nation regarding the US strike on Tehran, had said 'Iran's key nuclear enrichment facilities have been completely and totally obliterated.'
(with inputs from CNN)
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
&w=3840&q=100)

First Post
5 minutes ago
- First Post
Faulty math and accounting tricks: How much has DOGE inflated its savings numbers
Between February and July, DOGE's verifiable savings from cancelled contracts came to about $1.4 billion, far short of the $32.7 billion the agency claimed for that period. How did the numbers get so inflated? A man sprays paint graffiti against Elon Musk's Department of Government Efficiency (Doge) on a Tesla showroom in New York, US, April 22, 2025, in this still image taken from video. Extinction Rebellion NYC via Reuters The Trump administration's flagship cost-cutting agency, the Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE), says it has saved taxpayers more than $54 billion by tearing up federal contracts and taking a hard line on spending. A closer look at public data suggests those claims are greatly inflated. An analysis of federal spending records by POLITICO found that between February and July, DOGE's verifiable savings from cancelled contracts came to about $1.4 billion, far short of the $32.7 billion the agency claimed for that period. STORY CONTINUES BELOW THIS AD Even then, none of that money will reduce the federal deficit unless Congress takes back the funds. Under current law, most of it stays with the agencies, which must spend it. Counting credit limits as cash in hand DOGE uses the maximum possible value of each contract as its baseline for 'savings' — the ceiling value, not the amount actually committed. Contract experts say that approach is like canceling a credit card with a $20,000 limit and claiming you just saved $20,000. In many cases, these ceiling figures far exceed what the government was likely to spend. The White House insists DOGE's data is sound. Spokesman Harrison Fields said the figures are 'rigorously scrubbed' with agency officials and updated in real time. But POLITICO found that about 40 per cent of claimed savings from posted contracts could not be verified because DOGE withheld identifying details. Lowering the ceiling instead of closing the account In many cases, DOGE is not canceling contracts outright but lowering their ceiling values. That reduces the theoretical maximum cost, but it does not mean those dollars would have been spent. For the contracts that could be traced, ceiling reductions totaled about $14 billion— well below the $32.7 billion in claimed savings. Some cancelled contracts have even been restarted. At the Department of Veterans Affairs, DOGE claimed $932 million in savings from cancellations, including a suicide prevention services contract. Records show the VA recovered only $132 million, then reinstated the suicide prevention work. Headline figures vs. reality on the ground One of DOGE's largest single claims involves a migrant shelter contract in Pecos, Texas. DOGE said canceling it would save $2.9 billion. In reality, the maximum savings before the contract's scheduled review date in November would be about $126 million — roughly 4 per cent of DOGE's claim. The inflated number came from subtracting the $428 million actually obligated from the $3.3 billion ceiling. Another example is a consulting contract at the Energy Department to help set appliance efficiency standards. DOGE listed it as canceled, claiming $166 million in savings. The department says it was reduced, not cancelled, and that the real change was lowering the ceiling by just under $100 million. No funds have been returned. Hard to measure, harder to prove Experts note that true savings from canceling contracts are difficult to calculate. Terminations can trigger extra costs such as paying for work already done, settling leases, or covering subcontractors' expenses. Those bills can take years to finalise. By law, agencies must spend the money Congress gives them, even if a contract is canceled. They can shift it to other priorities but cannot simply leave it unspent without a formal rescission from Congress. A shrinking 'wall of receipts' DOGE's online 'wall of receipts,' a public log of terminated contracts, has seen slower updates since Elon Musk left the agency in May. The page went weeks without new entries this summer. Musk has since turned on Trump, criticising a spending bill the president signed in July and promising to launch his own third party to push for deeper cuts. STORY CONTINUES BELOW THIS AD For now, DOGE's lofty savings numbers remain a staple of administration talking points. But federal records suggest the truth lies somewhere in the middle, well below the headline figures and far above zero, with the real impact still years from being known.

Business Standard
5 minutes ago
- Business Standard
Trump aims for Ukraine ceasefire at Alaska summit with Putin, says Macron
Speaking after the virtual meeting between Trump, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy and other European leaders, Macron said Trump was prioritising a ceasefire between Ukraine and Russia AP Berlin French President Emmanuel Macron says US President Donald Trump was very clear in a meeting with European leaders that the US wants to achieve a ceasefire at the summit with Russian President Vladimir Putin in Alaska. Speaking after the virtual meeting between Trump, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy and other European leaders, Macron said Trump was prioritising a ceasefire between Ukraine and Russia. He added that Trump had been clear that territorial issues relating to Ukraine ... will only be negotiated by the Ukrainian president. Following his meeting with the Russian leader, Trump will also seek a future trilateral meeting one involving Trump, Putin and Zelenskyy, Macron said. I think that's a very important point in this regard. And we hope that it can be held in Europe, in a neutral country that is acceptable to all parties, Macron said. (Only the headline and picture of this report may have been reworked by the Business Standard staff; the rest of the content is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)


Time of India
5 minutes ago
- Time of India
President Trump visits the Kennedy Center, makes big announcement
U.S. President Donald Trump arrived at the John F. Kennedy Centre for the Performing Arts on Wednesday to unveil its 2025 honorees for artistic excellence and tout a major renovation as lawmakers push to rename the venue for the Republican president. In a post on his Truth Social platform on Tuesday, Trump teased the announcement, saying, "GREAT Nominees for the TRUMP/KENNEDY CENTER, whoops, I mean, KENNEDY CENTER, AWARDS." Trump also hinted at a physical overhaul of the centre in Washington, D.C., saying he planned to restore it to the "absolutely top level of luxury, glamour, and entertainment." No details were immediately available. Show more Show less