logo
Trump's strikes on Iranian nuclear sites trigger 'cat-and-mouse' hunt for missing uranium

Trump's strikes on Iranian nuclear sites trigger 'cat-and-mouse' hunt for missing uranium

Daily Mail​4 days ago
Trump's bombing of Iranian nuclear sites has created a new problem for inspectors - as they're forced into a game of 'cat-and-mouse' to find the 'missing' uranium.
UN inspectors are grappling with the issue of trying to tell if enriched uranium stocks, some of them near weapons grade, were buried beneath the rubble or had been secretly hidden away by the Ayatollah before Trump's B-2 bombers struck.
Following last weekend's attacks on three of Iran 's top nuclear sites - at Fordow, Natanz and Isfahan - President Donald Trump said the facilities had been 'obliterated' by US munitions, including bunker-busting bombs.
But the UN nuclear watchdog, the International Atomic Energy Agency, which monitors Tehran's nuclear program, has said it's unclear exactly what damage was sustained at Fordow, a plant buried deep inside a mountain that produced the bulk of Iran's most highly enriched uranium.
IAEA chief Rafael Grossi said on Monday it was highly likely the sensitive centrifuges used to enrich uranium inside Fordow were badly damaged.
It's far less clear whether Iran's 9 tons of enriched uranium - more than 400 kg of it enriched to close to weapons grade - were destroyed.
Western governments are scrambling to determine what's become of it.
Olli Heinonen, previously the IAEA's top inspector from 2005 to 2010, said the search will probably involve complicated recovery of materials from damaged buildings as well as forensics and environmental sampling, which take a long time.
'There could be materials which are inaccessible, distributed under the rubble or lost during the bombing,' said Heinonen, who dealt extensively with Iran while at the IAEA and now works at the Stimson Center think-tank in Washington.
Iran's more than 400 kg of uranium enriched to up to 60 percent purity - a short step from the roughly 90 percent of weapons grade - are enough, if enriched further, for nine nuclear weapons, according to an IAEA yardstick.
Even a fraction of that left unaccounted for would be a grave concern for Western powers that believe Iran is at least keeping the option of nuclear weapons open.
There are indications Iran may have moved some of its enriched uranium before it could be struck.
IAEA chief Grossi said Iran informed him on June 13, the day of Israel's first attacks, that it was taking measures to protect its nuclear equipment and materials. While it did not elaborate, he said that suggests it was moved.
A Western diplomat involved in the dossier, who asked not to be identified by Reuters, said most of the enriched uranium at Fordow would appear to have been moved days in advance of the attacks, 'almost as if they knew it was coming'.
Some experts have said a line of vehicles including trucks visible on satellite imagery outside Fordow before it was hit suggests enriched uranium there was moved elsewhere, though U.S. Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth on Thursday said he was unaware of any intelligence suggesting Iran had moved it.
The White House did not respond to a request for comment.
Another Western diplomat said it would be a major challenge to verify the condition of the uranium stockpile, citing a long list of past disputes between the IAEA and Tehran, including Iran's failure to credibly explain uranium traces found at undeclared sites.
'It'll be a game of cat and mouse.'
Iran says it has fulfilled all its obligations towards the watchdog.
On Friday, President Donald Trump revealed he would bomb Iran again if Tehran were enriching uranium and warned Ayatollah Ali Khamenei that he was close to an 'ugly death.'
'Sure, without a question. Absolutely,' Trump said when he was asked at a White House press conference about the possibility of a new bombing of Iranian nuclear sites if deemed necessary.
He also said he'd respond soon to Khamanei's statement that Iran won. And, after he left the presser, the president uploaded a lengthy post to his Truth Social account, blasting the Ayatollah.
'His Country was decimated, his three evil Nuclear Sites were OBLITERATED, and I knew EXACTLY where he was sheltered, and would not let Israel, or the U.S. Armed Forces, by far the Greatest and Most Powerful in the World, terminate his life. I SAVED HIM FROM A VERY UGLY AND IGNOMINIOUS DEATH,' Trump wrote.
'They have no hope, and it will only get worse! I wish the leadership of Iran would realize that you often get more with HONEY than you do with VINEGAR. PEACE!!!,' he added.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Iran: Still a chance for peace talks with US
Iran: Still a chance for peace talks with US

Sky News

time40 minutes ago

  • Sky News

Iran: Still a chance for peace talks with US

Iran's foreign ministry has told Sky News there is still a chance for peace talks with the United States. In an interview in Iran's foreign ministry in Tehran, a senior Iranian official said despite the attacks on his country by America and Israel, back-channel efforts are under way to restart the search for a diplomatic solution. The comments will be seen as an olive branch for the Trump administration to seize as it explores a diplomatic way forward. its short and devastating war with Israel. We also filmed the impact of Israel's attacks on ordinary Iranians in Tehran. In the wake of a ceasefire declared by Donald Trump, Esmaeil Baqaei, the Iranian foreign ministry spokesman, said the US must show it is genuine in its desire for peace. "Diplomacy must not be abused or used as a tool for deception or for simply a sort of psychological warfare against their adversaries." Iran felt diplomacy had been betrayed, he said. US-Iranian talks were on the verge of reconvening when Israel attacked his country. And America had breached international law in its support of what he called "Zionist aggression". But Mr Baqaei said "diplomacy never ends, there are contacts, indirectly. My minister is talking to Oman, Qatar and others". President Trump says he is ready to talk with Iran, but major stumbling blocks need to be overcome. The US wants Iran to give up nuclear enrichment completely. Iran has long insisted it has the right to carry on. Across town, we witnessed the impact of Israel's attacks in Gisha, an upmarket neighbourhood of Tehran. Israel claims its attacks on Iranian figures were precision-targeted. In reality they appear to have been far from surgical. The airstrike came at 10.30 Friday morning two weeks ago. It ripped a hole through four floors of reinforced concrete in the residential apartment block. The target may have been a nuclear scientist living there, but everyone in the building is now without a home. Engineers say it will almost certainly need to be torn down. The mood in the Iranian capital seems subdued and tense. Iranians fear Israelis will renew their air campaign despite the ceasefire. There is widespread resentment of the leadership after nationwide social unrest and massive economic problems. But the Israeli attacks have rallied many Iranians around their government all the same. They had hoped diplomacy with America could deliver a new deal and an end to sanctions, then Israel began its 12-day aerial onslaught and the US joined in. Iranians hope somehow talks can be restarted, but they also know the chances of progress are for now at least not great.

Iranian media publishes footage of Israeli strike on Tehran last month
Iranian media publishes footage of Israeli strike on Tehran last month

Daily Mail​

time2 hours ago

  • Daily Mail​

Iranian media publishes footage of Israeli strike on Tehran last month

Security camera footage appears to have revealed the utter devastation wrought on a square in Tehran by an Israeli air strike amid the Israeli Air Force's assault on Iran last month. The clip, which emerged this week after Israel and Iran agreed to a ceasefire, purports to show the moment a pair of Israeli bombs struck Quds Square in the Tajrish neighbourhood of the Iranian capital on June 15. It was shared by Israeli and Iranian media and is yet to be verified by Iranian officials. MailOnline has geolocated the footage and contacted the IDF for comment. The first projectile scythed into a building on Bahodar Street opposite municipal offices, with the explosion spraying rubble across the road as a thick cloud of smoke and ash rose from the blast site. Seconds later, another projectile soared in and struck the middle of the road packed with traffic, mere feet away from the municipal building draped in the Islamic Republic's flag. The explosion was enormous. Cars were lifted off the ground and tossed aside by the sheer force of the blast. Huge chunks of tarmac and pieces of debris were ripped up and sent flying through the air. Moments later, they came raining back down, crushing cars and pelting helpless civilians reeling from the shockwave of the initial explosion. A second video shared on social media in the aftermath of the strikes showed horrified civilians gathered around the blast site. The entire road was flooded, with the missile having left a gigantic crater and destroyed water pipes and sewage systems. Iran's health ministry reported shortly afterwards that 12 people were killed in the punishing attacks, with a further 59 people injured. On June 12, the UN issued a resolution based on findings from its nuclear watchdog, the IAEA, that Iran was not complying with inspection regulations. That ruling came after IAEA inspectors claimed Tehran had some 400 kilograms of highly enriched uranium (HEU) and could be weeks from having enough material to create several nuclear warheads. Israel began Operation Rising Lion less than 24 hours later, unleashing widespread attacks across Iran that it declared were necessary to prevent the Islamic Republic from obtaining nuclear weapons. Its warplanes relentlessly targeted Iran's nuclear sites, air defence systems and locations its intelligence found were housing high-ranking military officials and atomic scientists. Operatives from Mossad, Israel's intelligence service, had conducted a sabotage mission, knocking out some of Iran's air defence systems and missile launchers, opening the door for the air force to pound Tehran with impunity. In retaliation, Iran fired more than 550 ballistic missiles at Israel over the course of the almost fortnight-long war. Most were intercepted, but the sheer volume of projectiles - and the use of some hypersonic missiles - overwhelmed Israel's air defence systems. Some 28 people in Israel were killed by Tehran's missiles, but the death toll in Iran was much greater. This week, Iran's state-run IRNA news agency published updated casualty figures from its so-called 12-day war with Israel, declaring that 935 people were killed by Israeli bombs. It did not differentiate between civilian and military casualties. The conflict came to an end on June 25 after the United States Air Force (USAF) sent B-2 bombers armed with 30,000lb bunker-busting munitions and ship-launched Tomahawk missiles to batter Iran's nuclear sites at Fordow, Isfahan and Natanz. In the immediate aftermath of the strikes, US President Donald Trump insisted Iran 's nuclear facilities had been 'totally obliterated' and the Islamic Republic's chances of building a bomb erased. This week, the Pentagon declared that the attacks had set back Iran's nuclear programme by 1-2 years. Washington is now pushing Iran to enter negotiations over the future of its nuclear programme. Both the US and Israel have declared that Iran cannot be allowed to develop nuclear weapons. But Iran's parliament has voted to suspend its co-operation with the UN's nuclear watchdog amid concerns it could withdraw altogether from the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT), which obligates Tehran to cooperate with IAEA inspections . IAEA Rafael Grossi sent a letter to Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi to propose a meeting and urge the Islamic Republic to cooperate. 'Resuming cooperation with the IAEA is key to a successful diplomatic agreement to finally resolve the dispute over Iran's nuclear activities,' Grossi said in a statement. 'I've written to Foreign Minister Araghchi stressing the importance of us working together and proposing to meet soon.' He said IAEA inspectors have remained in Iran and are ready to start working again. 'As I have repeatedly stated – before and during the conflict – nuclear facilities should never be attacked due to the very real risk of a serious radiological accident,' Grossi said. Israel is believed to have dozens of nuclear weapons, though it has never formally acknowledged their existence, and is not a signatory to the NPT.

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