Satellite images indicate severe damage to Iran’s Fordow site, but doubts remain
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A close satellite view shows holes and craters on a ridge at the Fordow underground complex after the US struck the underground nuclear facility on June 22.
PHOTO: REUTERS
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WASHINGTON - Commercial satellite imagery indicates that the US attack on Iran’s Fordow nuclear plant severely damaged – and possibly destroyed – the deeply buried site and the uranium-enriching centrifuges it housed, but there was no confirmation, experts said on June 22.
“They just punched through with these MOPs,” said Mr David Albright, a former UN nuclear inspector who heads the Institute for Science and International Security, referring to the Massive Ordnance Penetrator bunker-busting bombs that the US said it dropped. “I would expect that the facility is probably toast.”
But confirmation of the below-ground destruction could not be determined, noted Mr Decker Eveleth, an associate researcher at CNA Corporation who specialises in satellite imagery. The hall containing hundreds of centrifuges is “too deeply buried for us to evaluate the level of damage based on satellite imagery”, he said.
To defend against attacks such as the one conducted by US forces early on June 22,
Satellite images show six holes where the bunker-busting bombs appear to have penetrated the mountain, and ground that looks disturbed and covered in dust.
The United States and Israel have said they intend to halt Tehran’s nuclear programme. But a failure to completely destroy its facilities and equipment could mean Iran could more easily restart the weapons programme that US intelligence and the UN International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) say it shuttered in 2003.
‘Unusual activity’
Several experts also cautioned that Iran likely moved a stockpile of near-weapons-grade highly enriched uranium out of Fordow before the US strike 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 June 19 and June 20, with a long line of vehicles waiting outside an entrance of the facility. A senior Iranian source told Reuters on June 22 that most of the near-weapons-grade 60 per cent highly enriched uranium had been moved to an undisclosed location before the US attack.
Mr Jeffrey Lewis from the Middlebury Institute of International Studies at Monterey said: “I don’t think you can with great confidence do anything but set back their nuclear programme by maybe a few years. There’s almost certainly facilities that we don’t know about.”
Arizona Senator Mark Kelly, a Democrat and member of the Senate intelligence committee who said he had been reviewing intelligence every day, expressed the same concern.
“My big fear right now is that they take this entire programme underground, not physically underground, but under the radar,” he told NBC News. “Where we tried to stop it, there is a possibility that this could accelerate it.”
Iran has long insisted that its nuclear programme is for peaceful purposes.
But in response to Israel’s attacks, Iran’s Parliament is threatening to withdraw from the Non-Proliferation Treaty – the cornerstone of the international system that went into force in 1970 to stop the spread of nuclear weapons – ending cooperation with the IAEA.
Mr Daryl Kimball, executive director of the Arms Control Association advocacy group, said: “The world is going to be in the dark about what Iran may be doing.”
‘Double tap’
Reuters spoke to four experts who reviewed Maxar Technologies’ satellite imagery of Fordow showing six neatly spaced holes in two groups in the mountain ridge beneath which the hall containing the centrifuges is believed to be located.
General Dan Caine, chairman of the US Joint Chiefs of Staff, told reporters that seven B-2 bombers dropped 14 GBU-57/B MOPs – 13,600kg precision-guided bombs designed to drive up to 61m into hardened underground facilities like Fordow, according to a 2012 congressional report.
Gen Caine said initial assessments indicated that the sites suffered extremely severe damage, but declined to speculate about whether any nuclear facilities remained intact.
Mr Eveleth said the Maxar imagery of Fordow and Gen Caine’s comments indicated that the B-2s dropped an initial load of six MOPs on Fordow, followed by a “double tap” of six more in the exact same spots.
The US strike, dubbed Operation Midnight Hammer, also targeted Tehran’s main uranium enrichment facility at Natanz, he said, and Isfahan, the location of the country’s largest nuclear research centre. There are other nuclear-related sites near the city.
Israel had already struck Natanz and the Isfahan Nuclear Technology Centre in its 10-day war with Iran.
Mr Albright said in a post on social media platform X that Airbus Defence and Space satellite imagery showed that US Tomahawk cruise missiles severely damaged a uranium facility at Isfahan, as well as an impact hole above the underground enrichment halls at Natanz reportedly caused by an MOP bunker-busting bomb that “likely destroyed the facility”.
He questioned the US use of cruise missiles in Isfahan, saying that those weapons could not penetrate a tunnel complex near the main nuclear research centre believed to be even deeper than Fordow. IAEA said the tunnel entrances “were impacted”
He noted that Iran recently informed the IAEA that it planned to install a new uranium enrichment plant in Isfahan.
“There may be 2,000 to 3,000 more centrifuges that were slated to go into this new enrichment plant,” he said. “Where are they?” REUTERS

