Latest news with #Fordow
Yahoo
20-07-2025
- Politics
- Yahoo
Pentagon dismisses report that US strike on Iran only destroyed 1 nuclear site
The Trump administration is pressing back on a new intelligence assessment, first reported by NBC News, that contradicts President Trump's repeated assertions that U.S. airstrikes 'obliterated' Iran's nuclear facilities last month. Citing five current and former U.S. officials familiar with the latest assessment, NBC News reported Thursday that Iran's Fordow nuclear enrichment site was mostly destroyed in the U.S. military operation, while two others — Isfahan and Natanz — may have only been set back by months and could resume operations. 'The credibility of the Fake News Media is similar to that of the current state of the Iranian nuclear facilities: destroyed, in the dirt, and will take years to recover,' Pentagon spokesperson Sean Parnell said in a statement to The Hill's sister network NewsNation on Thursday. 'President Trump was clear and the American people understand: Iran's nuclear facilities in Fordow, Isfahan, and Natanz were completely and totally obliterated.' 'There is no doubt about that,' he added. The White House also pushed back on the latest NBC News report. 'As the President has said and experts have verified, Operation Midnight Hammer totally obliterated Iran's nuclear capabilities,' deputy press secretary Anna Kelly told NewsNation. 'America and the world are safer thanks to his decisive action.' Reports first surfaced last month, shortly after the U.S. launched its surprise attacks on Tehran's nuclear sites, that U.S. intelligence officials at the Defense Department found that the attacks did not destroy Iran's nuclear infrastructure. The president and his allies forcefully pushed back on that assessment. NBC News reported that American and Israeli leaders have since discussed whether additional strikes on two less-damaged facilities could be necessary if Iran does not restart negotiations on a nuclear deal. The U.S. launched its Operation Midnight Hammer on the three key nuclear facilities on June 21 as Tehran and Israel traded airstrikes. The Israel-Iran conflict halted the U.S.'s efforts to reach an agreement with Tehran to prohibit the country from developing a nuclear weapon. Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. Solve the daily Crossword
Yahoo
20-07-2025
- Politics
- Yahoo
Trump doubles down on claim Iran strike ‘completely destroyed' nuclear sites
President Trump is doubling down on the administration's claim that U.S. military strikes 'completely destroyed' Iran's three nuclear sites last month, pushing back against a new assessment reportedly showing that only one of the three facilities was wrecked. 'All three nuclear sites in Iran were completely destroyed and/or OBLITERATED. It would take years to bring them back into service and, if Iran wanted to do so, they would be much better off starting anew, in three different locations, prior to those sites being obliterated, should they decide to do so,' Trump said in a Saturday morning post on Truth Social. A new intelligence assessment, reported by multiple news outlets on Thursday, indicates that Iran's nuclear enrichment site in Fordow was mostly destroyed during the June 21 strikes, but the two other principal sites — Natanz and Isfahan — were not and could potentially resume enriching uranium if Tehran greenlights it. The Defense Department, along with the White House, pushed back on the assessment, contending that the airstrikes, carried out by B-2 bombers and submarines firing Tomahawk cruise missiles, destroyed all three facilities. 'The credibility of the Fake News Media is similar to that of the current state of the Iranian nuclear facilities: destroyed, in the dirt, and will take years to recover,' the department's chief spokesman Sean Parnell said in a statement. 'President Trump was clear and the American people understand: Iran's nuclear facilities in Fordow, Isfahan, and Natanz were completely and totally obliterated.' 'There is no doubt about that,' he added. Parnell told reporters earlier this month that the Defense Department's intelligence assessments indicated that Iran's nuclear program was degraded by 'one to two years.' The Trump administration strongly criticized news outlets for reporting in June that an early, low-confidence report, compiled shortly after the U.S. strikes by the Defense Intelligence Agency, said that military strikes on the nuclear facilities only set Iran's nuclear program back by months. The U.S. military mission, called Operation Midnight Hammer, was launched on June 21, just days after Israel and Iran began trading blows. Trump said in late June that he would consider bombing Iran's nuclear sites again if U.S. intelligence raised more concerns about Tehran's nuclear enrichment capabilities. Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. Solve the daily Crossword
Yahoo
19-07-2025
- Politics
- Yahoo
Trump threatens to bomb Iran again if it builds new nuclear plants
Donald Trump has warned Iran that he will bomb the country again if it tries to resume its nuclear programme. The US president claimed it would take 'years' to bring the sites at Fordow, Natanz and Isfahan back into service and promised to 'obliterate' any new nuclear sites Iran may try and build. In a post on his Truth Social site sent from his golf club near Washington, he claimed all three of Tehran's nuclear sites had been destroyed after the US dropped 14 30,000lb GBU-57 'bunker buster' bombs on them. 'It would take years to bring them back into service and, if Iran wanted to do so, they would be much better off starting anew, in three different locations, prior to those sites being obliterated, should they decide to do so,' he said before ending with his trademark signoff. 'Thank you for your attention to this matter!' Mr Trump has endured a difficult week, fending off criticism from his supporters about his administration's handling of the Jeffrey Epstein case and the embarrassing revelation that he allegedly sent a lewd message and drawing to the billionaire financier in 2003, before he was convicted of sex offences. On Thursday, the White House said the swelling in Mr Trump's legs was caused by chronic venous insufficiency, a condition in which veins have trouble moving blood back to the heart. On Saturday, he pivoted back to one of the major successes of his presidency so far: Operation Midnight Hammer, when B-2 bombers struck Iran's nuclear sites without Iran firing a shot in defence. Mr Trump claims the Iranian programme was 'totally obliterated'. But a recent assessment by US intelligence suggested that only the underground site at Fordow was completely destroyed. Two other sites, at Natanz and Isfahan, may not have been dealt a knockout blow, according to officials who briefed NBC News last week. Sean Parnell, a Pentagon spokesman, dismissed the report. He said: 'The credibility of the Fake News Media is similar to that of the current state of the Iranian nuclear facilities: destroyed, in the dirt, and will take years to recover.' There have also been questions about whether the lead-up to the strikes on June 21 allowed Iran enough time to move highly enriched uranium to secret locations. For example, 16 lorries were spotted lining up outside Fordow ahead of the attacks. A possible destination was Pickaxe mountain, Kūh-e Kolang Gaz Lā, which is 90 miles south of Fordow, and minutes away from Natanz in central Isfahan province. Rafael Grossi, the director general of the International Atomic Energy Agency, said Iranian officials refused to answer questions about what was happening at the fortified, underground facility. He said: 'Since it is obvious it is in a place where numerous and important activities related to the programme are taking place, we're asking them, 'What is this for?' And they are telling us, 'It's none of your business.' Broaden your horizons with award-winning British journalism. Try The Telegraph free for 1 month with unlimited access to our award-winning website, exclusive app, money-saving offers and more.


Al Mayadeen
15-07-2025
- Politics
- Al Mayadeen
Iran demands US reparations, warns of future retaliation: Exclusive
Speaking to Al Mayadeen on Wednesday, Iran's Deputy Foreign Minister Saeed Khatibzadeh called on the United States to pay millions of dollars in reparations for its joint strikes with the Israeli regime on Iranian civilian nuclear sites. He added that Tehran will submit complaints to the United Nations condemning the attacks on its scientific and technical facilities at Fordow, Natanz, and Isfahan. Khatibzadeh labeled the Israeli attack as part of a larger strategic error by the entity, which he said had received "a major stinging blow" in response to its actions, warning that Israeli settlers are now paying the price for Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu's decisions. Moreover, he stressed that Washington must be held accountable for the extensive damage inflicted on Iran's nuclear infrastructure, emphasizing that the strikes constitute a blatant act of aggression and violate international norms. Khatibzadeh stated to Al Mayadeen that 'Iran does not trust a negotiator who plotted against it," warning that what could not be achieved through force would not be conceded through negotiations. He clarified that Iran has communicated, via indirect exchanges, that it will not resume nuclear negotiations with Washington unless Israeli attacks end and the Israeli occupation takes responsibility for its aggression. Concerning the ceasefire agreement, he stressed that there was no written ceasefire agreement with the occupation, and the current cessation of hostilities was a result of Iran's firm stance, pointing out the Israeli violations in Gaza, Lebanon, and Syria. On another note, the Iranian diplomat confirmed that Iran launched a powerful retaliatory strike on the US military's al-Udeid airbase near Doha on Monday evening, marking a response to the earlier attacks on Iran's nuclear facilities. Speaking to Al Mayadeen, he added that Iran's armed forces remain fully prepared to respond decisively to any new act of aggression, emphasizing that "Iran, a powerful and resilient country, stood firm in the face of the Israeli aggression." Additionally, Khatibzadeh sharply criticized International Atomic Energy Agency chief Rafael Grossi, accusing him of playing a regrettable role in facilitating the attacks. He called for Grossi to be held accountable. That said, Iran's Parliament announced a major shift in nuclear oversight policy on Wednesday, voting to suspend cooperation with the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) unless the safety of its nuclear facilities is guaranteed.
Yahoo
07-07-2025
- Yahoo
GBU-57 Massive Ordnance Penetrator Successor In The Works
The U.S. Air Force's first combat employment of 30,000-pound GBU-57/B Massive Ordnance Penetrator (MOP) bunker buster bombs in recent strikes on Iranian nuclear sites draws new attention to work toward a successor. There was already very active U.S. military interest in a new Next Generation Penetrator (NGP) when the MOP first began entering service in the early 2010s. B-2 Spirit stealth bombers dropped 14 GBU-57/B on targets in Iran – 12 on the enrichment facility at Fordow and two more on the one at Natanz – during strikes this past weekend dubbed Operation Midnight Hammer, which you can read more about here. The B-2 is the only aircraft cleared to employ the MOP operationally, but the forthcoming B-21 Raider stealth bomber is expected to be able to employ them, as well. B-52 bombers have also dropped the huge bunker busters during testing. The existing MOP stockpile is understood to be relatively small, but Bloomberg reported last year that work was being done to help triple or even quadruple the annual production capacity of the munitions. The 20-and-a-half-feet-long GBU-57/B is a precision-guided bomb that consists of a penetrating 'warhead,' which has its own designation (BLU-127/B), along with a GPS-assisted inertial navigation system (INS) guidance package, specialized fuzes, and other components. The explosive content of the MOP, which also has a diameter of 31-and-a-half-inches, is only roughly 20 percent of its total weight. The most recent publicly stated requirements for the NGP come from a contracting notice the Air Force put out in February 2024. It called for a warhead weighing 22,000 pounds or less, and that would be 'capable of blast / frag[mentation] / and penetration effects,' but did not specify a desired gross weight for the entire munition. No prospective dimensions were provided, either. 'The prototype penetrator warhead design effort should allow integration of technologies acquired and lessons learned under previous penetrator warhead developments to meet performance requirements for the HDBT target set,' the contracting notice added. 'The USAF will consider novel, demonstrated, or fielded Guidance, Navigation & Control (GNC) technologies with viability for integration into a warhead guidance system design that can achieve repeatable, high accuracy performance in GPS aided, degraded, and/or denied environments.' The notice also said that a 'terminal accuracy' of 'CE90 w/in 2.2m both in GPS aided, degraded, and denied environments' was desired. What 'CE90 w/in 2.2m' means in layman's terms is a munition that can hit within 7.2 feet (2.2 meters) of a specified impact point at least 90 percent of the time. This is a very high degree of required accuracy, especially for employment in GPS-degraded or denied environments. For comparison, the Air Force says, on average, GPS-assisted INS-guided Joint Direct Attack Munition (JDAM) bombs can hit within 16.4 feet (five meters) of designated target coordinates under optimal conditions, but that this can grow to nearly 100 feet (30 meters) if GPS connectivity is lost. While the exact terminal accuracy of the existing MOP is unknown, post-strike imagery from Fordow and Natanz points to an extreme degree of precision. The NGP contracting notice put out last February also mentions 'possible integration of embedded fuze technology,' but does not elaborate. Reliable fuzing, in general, is particularly important for bunker buster bombs, the components of which have to be able to withstand additional forces as the munition burrows through hard material. Bombs like the MOP and any future NGP that are designed to penetrate very deeply have additional specialized fuzing needs, especially for employment against targets where pre-strike intelligence about the exact depth and/or physical layout is limited. Work on advanced void-sensing fuzes that can detect when a munition has breached into a sufficiently large space, such as a room in an underground facility, is an area of development that has already been of particular interest for the U.S. military for years now. A fuze that is able to just effectively 'count' floors to help determine depth to detonate the bomb at a certain level for maximum damage would also be a useful addition. As already noted, the U.S. military was already looking ahead to a future NGP when MOP began entering service in the early 2010s. The February 2024 contracting notice specifically mentions 'the 2012 Hard Target Munitions (HTM) Analysis of Alternatives (AoA) and HTM AoA Excursion from 2019' as having contributed to the requirements for the next-generation bunker buster. The GBU-57/B's own development, which the Pentagon's Defense Threat Reduction Agency (DTRA) carried out in cooperation with the Air Force, dates back to at least 2002. Work on MOP also notably began as a so-called 'quick reaction capability' effort to meet pressing operational needs, rather than a full program of record, and the design has been upgraded several times in the past 15 years or so. In addition to the requirements laid out in the contracting notice last year, the Air Force has said in the past that one of its key areas of interest for NGP is the addition of a powered standoff capability. Notional renderings have shown a design with a rocket booster. MOPs are unpowered and have to be released close to the target, a key reason why the highly survivable B-2 is currently the only operational delivery platform. The Air Force has also said it is interested in a future NGP with the ability to prosecute more hardened and/or deeper targets, as well as enhanced and potentially scalable terminal effects. The current maximum depth that MOP can penetrate down to is unknown, but it is at least 200 feet (60 meters), according to publicly available data. Subsequent upgrades may have increased its penetrating capability substantially. The Air Force has also talked previously about the possibility of NGP being a family of systems, rather than a single munition, and has also tied it to the secretive Long Range Strike (LRS) family of systems. The best-known member of the LRS 'system of systems' is the B-21 bomber, but it includes the stealthy AGM-181A Long Range Stand Off (LRSO) nuclear-tipped cruise missile and many other elements, as you can read more about here. In 2020, the Air Force publicly disclosed interest in a separate next-generation Global Precision Attack Weapon (GPAW) bunker buster bomb that would be small enough to be carried internally by a stealthy F-35 Joint Strike Fighter. The service also began fielding a new precision-guided 5,000-pound-class bunker buster, the GBU-72/B, sometime in the past few years. What appears to be the first reported operational use of GBU-72/Bs came last year during strikes against Iranian-backed Houthi militants in Yemen. The B-21 presents its own specific considerations for both MOP and a future NGP. The B-2 can already only carry two MOPs at once, and the smaller Raider is expected to be able to lug just one. Taking the example of Operation Midnight Hammer, it would've taken twice as many B-21s to carry out that mission. As such, a new bunker buster bomb that sits somewhere in the wide range between the GBU-72/B and the GBU-57/B could be a major boon for pairing with the Raider. It is also worth noting here that the Air Force does currently plan to acquire a B-21 fleet that will be significantly larger than its current B-2 force. The assessed outcome of the GBU-57/B strikes on Fordow and Natanz will now be another factor for the Air Force to consider when it comes to the future NGP. Though the U.S. military says the strikes successfully hit the intended targets, significant questions remain about the actual damage caused to the underground Iranian facilities. Well before Operation Midnight Hammer was launched, a debate had emerged about whether Fordow, in particular, could be beyond the reach even of the MOP. For the U.S. military, the value of having a non-nuclear means to prosecute very deeply-buried targets from the air extends well beyond Iran. North Korea has also been notably expanding its underground infrastructure, a trend that has been driven in no small part by the threat of strikes from the United States. MOP, as well as any future NGP, could be called upon in any future conflict against a larger adversary like China or Russia, both of which have long histories of building deep underground facilities, including mountain caverns for aircraft and submarines. In January, the Financial Times newspaper published a detailed piece on the Chinese People's Liberation Army's (PLA) construction of a new 1,500-acre command center complex in Beijing that includes a major subterranean component. Additional details that emerge about the MOP strikes on Iran might further fuel global trends regarding the construction of new underground facilities. The video below includes a clip of a B-2 bomber dropping a GBU-57/B during a test. An NGP bunker buster with standoff capability could also be not just valuable, but increasingly critical as the air defense ecosystem expands and evolves. The Air Force has separately assessed that anti-air missiles with ranges of up to 1,000 miles will be among the threats it has to contend with by 2050. Even very stealthy aircraft like the B-2 or the B-21 will be highly challenged to make direct attacks against heavily defended key targets of a peer state, especially during the critical opening days of a high-end conflict. As it stands now, the current NGP effort, at least from what the Air Force has shared publicly, is still at a very early stage. The service has said it is interested in taking delivery of an initial set of around 10 subscale test articles, as well as three to five full-scale warhead prototypes, within 18 to 24 months of a contract award, but when that deal might be signed is unknown. There does not appear to be a publicly stated timeline yet for when NGPs might begin to enter actual operational service. Regardless, the U.S. military has now demonstrated the value of the MOP's very deep-penetrating bunker buster capability in a real-world operation, making it a household name and cementing its place in the history books. This is likely to put new emphasis on the long-standing interest in a potential successor and prompt more resources to be put toward work on a future NGP. Contact the author: joe@