logo
Satellite pictures show secret activity at Iranian nuclear site that the U.S. bombed

Satellite pictures show secret activity at Iranian nuclear site that the U.S. bombed

Daily Mail​a day ago

New satellite photos have revealed that Iran is trying to piece back together its nuclear site after the U.S. bombed it.
Heavy machinery was seen at the Fordow site as Iran appears to be intensifying its construction and excavation of the nuclear facility after U.S. B-2 bombers struck it last Saturday in Operation Midnight Hammer.
Activity was seen near the tunnel entrances and near the points where the American buster bombs struck in Donald Trump's early-morning attack.
Construction equipment was also seen digging new access roads to the facility and repairing damage to the main one in order to restore access to the country's main nuclear facility.
Trump said the strikes 'completely obliterated' Iran's nuclear program and set it back years, but the new aerial images suggest the country has taken preliminary efforts to protect its facility.
Iranian media said the sites had been evacuated prior to the strikes and the enriched uranium was transported to a 'safe location'.
It is unclear how much uranium was left at the site during the bomb, but officials said there is no contamination after the strikes.
Earthwork also showed signs tunnel entrances might have been sealed off before the attacks, Newsweek reported.
Similar construction activity was seen at the Fordow site prior to the strikes, where Iranians were seen shipping contents from the nuclear site to another location a half a mile away.
Despite the extent of the damage being up to question, International Atomic Energy Agency - the UN's nuclear watchdog - said Fordow's centrifuges were 'no longer operational' and suffered 'enormous damage'.
A leaked preliminary report from the Defense Intelligence Agency, a U.S. government intelligence group, suggested there was 'low confidence' that the Middle Eastern country's program had been set back.
Even Iran's leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei has said the U.S. hit Tehran's nuclear sites but achieved 'nothing significant'.
He said: 'Anyone who heard [Trump's] remarks could tell there was a different reality behind his words - they could do nothing.'
The Trump Administration - including Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth and Director Of National Intelligence Tulsi Gabbard - pushed back on the report.
Hegseth slammed the media for diminishing the strikes, which Trump compared to Hiroshima.
'Your people are trying to leak and spin that it wasn't successful, it's irresponsible,' he said at a press conference.
'There's nothing that I've seen that suggests that what we didn't hit exactly what we wanted to hit in those locations,' he explained without offering further evidence that the uranium was destroyed.
Trump has threatened to sue The New York Times and CNN for reporting on the preliminary report.
The Times reported on Thursday that Trump's personal lawyer Alejandro Brito had reached out to the newspaper and said the article had damaged the President's reputation.
The letter demanded The Times 'retract and apologize for' the story, calling it 'false,' 'defamatory' and 'unpatriotic'.
The newspaper's lawyer responded by noting that Trump administration officials had confirmed the existence of the report after The Times published its findings.
'No retraction is needed,' The Times' lawyer David McCraw said in a letter. 'No apology will be forthcoming. We told the truth to the best of our ability. We will continue to do so.'
A spokesperson for CNN told The Times that the cable news network had responded to Trump's lawyer in a similar fashion.
Operation Midnight Hammer marked the end of a 45-year stand-off between the U.S. and Iran.
Trump warned Iran not to try and rebuild its nuclear program.
'I don't think they'll ever do it again,' he said while attending a NATO summit. 'They just went through hell. I think they've had it. The last thing they want to do is enrich.'
But the President also didn't rule out another airstrike if necessary.
When asked whether the U.S. would strike again if Iran built its nuclear enrichment program, he replied: 'Sure.'
In total, the U.S. launched 75 precision-guided munitions, including more than two dozen Tomahawk missiles, and more than 125 military aircraft in the operation against three nuclear sites.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

US President Donald Trump to visit Scottish golf courses in coming weeks
US President Donald Trump to visit Scottish golf courses in coming weeks

Edinburgh Live

time25 minutes ago

  • Edinburgh Live

US President Donald Trump to visit Scottish golf courses in coming weeks

Our community members are treated to special offers, promotions and adverts from us and our partners. You can check out at any time. More info Controversial US President Donald Trump is set to visit Scotland for the first time since starting his second term. The 47th US President is allegedly set to embark on a trip to his Scottish golf courses at the end of July according to the MailOnline. Trump has a meeting with King Charles pencilled in, with rumours swirling the encounter could take place at Balmoral or Dumfries House. However, it is understood their diaries clash, the Record reports. Trump was invited for an unprecedented second State Visit likely to take place in September. MailOnline reported that in the final two weeks of July, security services are preparing for Air Force One to fly into Prestwick Airport with Trump having a ring of steel thrown around him amid anticipated protests. During his first stint in office, thousands of Scots took to the streets in Glasgow, Edinburgh and Aberdeen to oppose the former Apprentice TV star's visit. Join Edinburgh Live's Whatsapp Community here and get the latest news sentstraight to your messages. The US president will likely visit Turnberry, which was vandalised by pro-Palestine protesters in March, and his Trump International controversial course in Aberdeen, which has had claims lodged against it that it destroyed one of the world's rarest sand dune systems. It's also thought that Trump may visit his new Aberdeenshire course, the MacLeod Trump International Golf Links course - named in honour of his Lewis-born mother, Mary Anne MacLeod - which is set to open before mid-August. Trump has repeatedly asked Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer about hosting The Open at Turnberry, which he bought in 2014 for £46 million, but the organisers have yet to concede to his demands. His son, Eric Trump, said recently: "Turnberry is considered to be the best golf course in the world by the players, the writers, the spectators and the entire golfing community. "If we get the call, and I sincerely hope we do, I promise the Royal and Ancient that we will be the best hosts The Open Championship has ever seen." Sign up for Edinburgh Live newsletters for more headlines straight to your inbox After Trump was invited for second State Visit, the Scottish Greens launched a 'Dump Trump' petition, claiming the president was not welcome in Scotland as he presents "a clear and present danger to our climate, peace and human rights around the world". It was signed by over 6000 people. First Minister John Swinney condemned the president following his heated exchange with Ukraine's Volodymyr Zelensky in the Oval Office earlier this year.

Israel-Gaza war live: Israeli forces kill 23, Gaza authorities say, amid IDF warning of major offensive in north
Israel-Gaza war live: Israeli forces kill 23, Gaza authorities say, amid IDF warning of major offensive in north

The Guardian

time26 minutes ago

  • The Guardian

Israel-Gaza war live: Israeli forces kill 23, Gaza authorities say, amid IDF warning of major offensive in north

Update: Date: 2025-06-30T06:39:58.000Z Title: Opening summary Content: Israeli airstrikes and gunfire killed 23 people in Gaza on Sunday, the territory's civil defence agency said, as tens of thousands of Palestinian people were fleeing eastern parts of Gaza City after Israel warned of a major assault on the north. Agency spokesperson Mahmud Bassal said at least three children were among those killed in airstrikes at five locations around Gaza and another person died from Israeli fire near an aid distribution centre. On Gaza City in the north, messages on social media from the Israel Defense Forces warned of 'military operations [that] will escalate, intensify and extend westward to the city centre' and directed those living in several crowded neighbourhoods to al-Mawasi, a coastal area much farther south that is already overcrowded and has very limited facilities. Witnesses described scenes of chaos as entire families tried to pack their remaining belongings, tents and meagre stocks of foods on to donkey carts, bicycles, improvised pickup trucks and cars, my colleague Jason Burke reports. In other developments: Mahmud Bassal said two children were killed in an airstrike on their home in Gaza City's Zeitun neighbourhood early on Sunday and 'the house was completely destroyed'. A member of the family, Abdel Rahman Azzam, 45, told AFP he was at home and 'heard a huge explosion at my relative's house'. 'I rushed out in panic and saw the house destroyed and on fire.' Bassal said a drone strike on a tent housing displaced people near the southern city of Khan Younis killed five people including a child. Other casualties included a young man killed 'by Israeli fire this morning while waiting for aid' near a humanitarian distribution centre in the southern city of Rafah, the Gaza civil defence spokesperson said. Israeli prime minister, Benjamin Netanyahu, said on Sunday his country's 'victory' over Iran in their 12-day war had created 'opportunities', including for freeing hostages held in Gaza. The main group representing hostages' families welcomed 'the fact that after 20 months, the return of the hostages has finally been designated as the top priority by the prime minister'. Donald Trump reiterated calls for a swift end to Israel's war on Gaza. 'Make the deal in Gaza, get the hostages back,' the US president posted on his Truth Social platform. Indirect talks between Israel and Hamas, brokered by Qatar and Egypt, are continuing but without clear sign of a breakthrough.

China partially lifts ban on Japanese seafood imports
China partially lifts ban on Japanese seafood imports

BBC News

time31 minutes ago

  • BBC News

China partially lifts ban on Japanese seafood imports

China has lifted a ban on seafood imports from most regions of Japan, which was imposed two years ago due to concerns over the release of treated waste water from the Fukushima nuclear said it will "conditionally resume" the imports from Japan with the exception of 10 of the country's 47 prefectures, including Tokyo and Fukushima. Samples collected over long-term monitoring of nuclear-contaminated water from Fukushima had "not shown abnormalities", China's General Administration of Customs wrote on 29 June.A tsunami in 2011 flooded three reactors of the Fukushima plant in north-east Japan in what is regarded as the world's worst nuclear disaster since Chernobyl. Three of six nuclear reactors at the plant suffered a meltdown during the tsunami, leaving the facility severely damaged. Over the years more than a million tonnes of treated waste water accumlated there. In 2023, Japan began discharging the treated waste water into the ocean - a move backed by the International Atomic Energy Agency. The process is expected to take up to 30 most experts agree that the release is safe, some scientists say there isn't enough research yet on the potential impact on the ocean. But Beijing criticised Japan's decision and almost immediately banned seafood from the country, citing environmental concerns and safety fears. Before that, China had been Japan's biggest seafood buyer accounting for nearly a quarter of its exports. Japan has said that China's move to partially lift the ban was a "positive" move, adding that the government will continue to urge Beijing to accept seafood imports from all of its regions. The decision came after Tokyo promised to ensure the safety and quality of its exports. Production companies that had suspended imports must now reapply for registration in China and would be subject to supervision, officials said. China and Japan are key trading partners but have long had a testy relationship because of territorial disputes and Japan's occupation of parts of China in the past.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store