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Pentagon chief backs Trump on success of Iran strikes

Pentagon chief backs Trump on success of Iran strikes

CNA5 hours ago

WASHINGTON: US defence secretary Pete Hegseth insisted on Thursday (Jun 26) that American strikes on Iranian nuclear sites were a success, backing President Donald Trump and berating the media for questioning the results of the operation.
American B-2 bombers hit two Iranian nuclear sites with massive GBU-57 bunker-buster bombs last weekend, while a guided missile submarine struck a third site with Tomahawk cruise missiles.
"President Trump created the conditions to end the war, decimating - choose your word - obliterating, destroying Iran's nuclear capabilities," Hegseth told journalists at the Pentagon, referring to a 12-day conflict between Israel and Iran.
Trump has called the strikes a "spectacular military success" and repeatedly said they "obliterated" the nuclear sites.
On Thursday, he insisted that Iran did not manage to move nuclear materials - including enriched uranium - ahead of the US military action.
"Nothing was taken out of facility. Would take too long, too dangerous, and very heavy and hard to move!" Trump said in a post on his Truth Social platform.
This was echoed by Hegseth. "I'm not aware of any intelligence that I've reviewed that says things were not where they were supposed to be, moved or otherwise," he said.
However, US media revealed a preliminary American intelligence assessment earlier this week that said the strikes only set back Iran's nuclear program by months - coverage sharply criticised by Hegseth.
"Whether it's fake news CNN, MSNBC or the New York Times, there's been fawning coverage of a preliminary assessment."
The document was "leaked because someone had an agenda to try to muddy the waters and make it look like this historic strike wasn't successful", Hegseth said.
Trump has also lashed out at coverage of the intelligence report, calling for journalists to lose their jobs.
Hegseth did not definitively state that the enriched uranium and enriching centrifuges at the heart of Iran's controversial nuclear program had been wiped out, but cited intelligence officials - although giving little detail - as saying the nuclear facilities were destroyed.
"If you want to know what's going on at Fordow, you better go there and get a big shovel, because no one's under there right now," Hegseth said, referring to the deep-underground nuclear site.
After the strikes, several experts also cautioned that Iran likely moved a stockpile of near weapons-grade highly enriched uranium out of Fordow before the strike early Sunday morning and could be hiding it and other nuclear components in locations unknown to Israel, the US and UN nuclear inspectors.
They noted satellite imagery from Maxar Technologies showing "unusual activity" at Fordow on Thursday and Friday, with a long line of vehicles waiting outside an entrance to the facility.
A senior Iranian source told Reuters on Sunday that most of the near weapons-grade 60 per cent highly enriched uranium had been moved to an undisclosed location before the US attack.
Israel launched an unprecedented air campaign targeting Iranian nuclear sites, scientists and top military brass on Jun 13 in a bid to end the nuclear program, which Tehran says has only civilian purposes but Washington and other powers say is pursuing atomic weapons.
Trump had spent weeks pursuing a diplomatic path to replace the nuclear deal with Tehran that he tore up during his first term in 2018, but he ultimately decided to take military action.

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