
Startling new satellite pictures show secret activity at Iranian nuclear site that the US bombed to pieces
New satellite photos reveal Iran is trying to piece together its nuclear site after the US bombed it.
Heavy machinery was seen at the Fordow site as it appeared Iran has intensified its construction and excavation of the nuclear site after US B-2 bombers struck it last Saturday in Operation Midnight Hammer.
Activity was seen near the tunnel entrances and near the points where the buster bombs struck.
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.
US President Donald Trump said the strikes 'completely obliterated' Iran's nuclear program and set it back years, but the new satellite images suggest the Middle Eastern country had taken preliminary effort 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 US government intelligence group, suggested there was 'low confidence' that that Middle Eastern country's program had been set back.
Even Iran's Ayatollah Ali Khamenei has said the United States hit Tehran's nuclear sites but achieved 'nothing significant.'
'Anyone who heard [Trump's] remarks could tell there was a different reality behind his words - they could do nothing,' the 86-year-old Iranian leader said.
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.
'Your people are trying to leak and spin that it wasn't successful, it's irresponsible,' he said.
'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 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 United States and Iran.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


The Sun
21 minutes ago
- The Sun
IDF ‘assassinates Hamas mastermind of October 7' who founded terror group's military wing in targeted Israeli airstrike
ISRAEL says it has killed one of the last masterminds behind the bloody October 7 attacks. Senior Hamas commander Hakham Muhammad Issa Al-Issa was "eliminated" in a targeted airstrike on Gaza City, according to the IDF. 1 The Israel Defense Forces said Al-Issa — described as a founding member of Hamas' military wing — was 'eliminated' in an operation on the Sabra neighbourhood. 'Issa led Hamas' force build-up, training, and planned the October 7 massacre,' the IDF posted on X. As Head of Combat Support, he advanced aerial & naval attacks against Israelis. 'The IDF & [Israel Security Agency] will continue to locate and eliminate all terrorists involved in the October 7 massacre.' According to Palestinian reports, Al-Issa was killed along with his wife and grandson, though this has not been independently confirmed. The IDF later said it had verified his death, according to The Jerusalem Post. Al-Issa is widely believed to have played a pivotal role in orchestrating the October 7 assault on southern Israel that triggered the current war, with terrorists slaughtering kidnapping dozens of innocent people. The military described him as a 'central knowledge figure' and a high-value target who was instrumental in building Hamas' training and weapons programmes. The IDF said in a statement: 'In the past, Issa led Hamas' force-buildup efforts in the Gaza Strip, was one of the founders of its military wing, served as Head of the Training Headquarters, and was a member of Hamas' General Security Council. 'Additionally, Issa played a significant role in the planning and execution of the brutal October 7 massacre.'


Times
29 minutes ago
- Times
Channel 4 to screen Gaza documentary the BBC wouldn't show
Channel 4 will this week broadcast a documentary about medics in Gaza that was dropped by the BBC over concerns it 'risked creating a perception of partiality' in the corporation's coverage of the conflict. Gaza: Doctors Under Attack, which will air on Wednesday evening, examines allegations that Israeli forces have targeted hospitals and healthcare workers in the territory in breach of international law. Channel 4 described the documentary, which was made by the independent production company Basement Films, as 'a forensic investigation'. Louisa Compton, Channel 4's head of news and current affairs, who acquired the documentary, said: 'We are showing this programme because we believe that, following thorough fact-checking and verification, we are presenting a duly impartial view of a subject that both divides opinion and frequently provokes dispute about what constitutes a fact. 'The result is harrowing … It will make people angry, whichever side they take, or if they take no side. But while we would never judge anyone who decides that showing something could create a risk of being thought to be taking sides, we believe there are times when the same risk is run by not showing anything at all.' The BBC commissioned the film last year and was initially supposed to broadcast it earlier this year. Executives first shelved the documentary until an investigation into a previous film on the region had concluded, then scrapped it entirely on June 20. It is understood that the corporation had been particularly concerned that posts on social media by some of the documentary makers could contravene the BBC's commitment to impartiality. The day before it was axed, one of its co-directors, the Emmy award-winning journalist Ramita Navai, appeared on BBC Radio 4's Today programme to talk about the Iran-Israel conflict. Segueing into speaking about Gaza, Navai said: 'The world has been watching as Israel has become a rogue state that is committing war crimes and ethnic cleansing and mass-murdering Palestinians.' The presenter Amol Rajan responded that many listeners would 'take issue' with her description of Israel's actions, to which Navai replied: 'That isn't my opinion. I have been investigating it for a year and a half, actually, for a documentary for the BBC investigating Israel's war crimes. I've collected lots of evidence of that.' Ben de Pear, the founder of Basement Films and a former editor of Channel 4 News, had also criticised the BBC and its director-general, Tim Davie, for not running the film. Speaking at Sheffield DocFest earlier this month, de Pear said: 'All the decisions about our film were not taken by journalists, they were taken by Tim Davie. He is just a PR person. Tim Davie is taking editorial decisions which, frankly, he is not capable of making.' The film had been scrutinised by BBC legal and compliance teams, but the corporation said the documentary had not undergone its 'final pre-broadcast sign-off processes'. The delay to its release caused an outcry among BBC journalists. At a recent BBC staff town hall, Davie was repeatedly questioned about the decision, which was the most common staff concern raised, ahead of pay and redundancies. Production was first paused following the scandal over Gaza: How to Survive a Warzone, which was made by a different company, Hoyo Films. After it emerged that the narrator was the son of a deputy agriculture minister in the Hamas-run government, the film was pulled from the BBC's iPlayer. It is now the subject of an internal BBC investigation, the findings of which are expected to be published next month. Channel 4 said that the film had been fact-checked to ensure it meets its editorial standards and the Ofcom Broadcasting Code. Basement Films added: 'We want to apologise to the contributors and team for the long delay and thank Channel 4 for enabling it to be seen.'


BBC News
38 minutes ago
- BBC News
At least 81 people killed in Israeli strikes in Gaza, Hamas-run health ministry says
At least 81 Palestinians have been killed and more than 400 injured in Israeli strikes across Gaza in the 24 hours until midday on Saturday, the Hamas-run health ministry one incident, at least 11 people, including children, were killed after a strike near a stadium in Gaza City, Al-Shifa hospital staff and witnesses told news agencies. The stadium was being used to house displaced people, living in verified by the BBC shows people digging through the sand with their bare hands and spades to find BBC has contacted the Israeli military for US President Donald Trump said he was hopeful a ceasefire could be agreed in the next week. Qatari mediators said they hoped US pressure could achieve a deal, following a truce between Israel and Iran that ended the 12-day conflict between the March, a two-month ceasefire collapsed when Israel launched fresh strikes on Gaza. The ceasefire deal - which started on 19 January - was set up to have three stages, but did not make it past the first two included establishing a permanent ceasefire, the return of remaining living hostages in Gaza in exchange for Palestinians imprisoned in Israel, and the complete withdrawal of Israeli forces from Thursday, a senior Hamas official told the BBC mediators have intensified their efforts to broker a new ceasefire and hostage release deal in Gaza, but that negotiations with Israel remain stalled.A rally was organised on Saturday evening in Tel Aviv calling for a deal to free the remaining Israeli hostages held by Hamas in Gaza. Organisers said "the time has come to end the fighting and bring everyone home in one phase".Meanwhile, Israeli attacks in Gaza continue. Friday evening's strike near the Palestine Stadium in Gaza City killed at least 11 people, hospital staff and witnesses witness said they were sitting when they "suddenly heard a huge explosion" after a road was hit."This area was packed with tents - now the tents are under the sand. We spent hours digging with our bare hands," Ahmed Qishawi told the Reuters news agency. He said there are "no wanted people here, nor any terrorists as they [Israelis] claim... [there are] only civilian residents, children, who were targeted with no mercy," he BBC has verified footage showing civilians and emergency services digging through the sandy ground with their hands and spades to find bodies. Fourteen more people were reported killed, some of them children, in strikes on an apartment block and a tent in the al-Mawasi strike in al-Mawasi killed three children and their parents, who died while they were asleep, relatives told the Associated Press."What did these children do to them? What is their fault?" the children's grandmother, Suad Abu Teima, told the news people were reported killed on Saturday afternoon after an air strike on the Tuffah neighbourhood near Jaffa School, where hundreds of displaced Gazans were sheltering. The strike killed at least eight people, including five children, the Palestinian health ministry witness Mohammed Haboub told Reuters that his nephews, father and the children of his neighbours were killed in the strike."We didn't do anything to them, why do they harm us? Did we harm them? We are civilians," he told the news health ministry said ambulance and civil defence crews were facing difficulties in reaching a number of victims trapped under the rubble and on the roads, due to the impossibility of movement in some of the affected areas. The Israel Defense Forces (IDF) has not yet commented on these reported strikes. The IDF released a statement on Saturday evening saying it had killed Hakham Muhammad Issa al-Issa, a senior figure in Hamas's military wing, in the area of Sabra in Gaza City on Israeli military launched its bombardment of Gaza in response to Hamas's 7 October 2023 attack on Israel, in which about 1,200 people were killed and 251 others were taken than 56,000 people have been killed in Gaza since then, according to the territory's Hamas-run health ministry.