Overview Logo
Article Main Image

Did a fleet of trucks remove Iran’s nuclear assets before US strikes?

The Age

Australia

Monday, June 23


Alternative Takes

The World's Current Take

US Attack on Iran

Israeli Strikes on Iran


In an already fraying global world order, the US attacks on three Iranian nuclear facilities have heightened fears of a potentially cataclysmic descent into further violence.

So far analysts and experts are struggling to grasp the full implications of the attacks. There remain far more unknowns than knowns. Here are some of the key questions.

A US Airforce B-2 of the sort used to attack Iranian nuclear facilities over the weekend is refuelled in 2006.
A US Airforce B-2 of the sort used to attack Iranian nuclear facilities over the weekend is refuelled in 2006.

Were Iran’s nuclear sites obliterated?

We don’t know. Announcing the strikes, US president Donald Trump said Iranian nuclear enrichment capacity had been “completely and totally obliterated”, but at a Pentagon briefing held later, Defence Secretary Pete Hegseth said Iran’s “nuclear ambitions” had been obliterated. Moments later Joint Chiefs of Staff chairman General Dan Caine said damage assessments would take some time. “Initial battle damage assessments indicate that all three sites sustained extremely severe damage and destruction.”

The world’s nuclear watchdog, the International Atomic Energy Agency, has released a statement saying that at Iran’s main location for enrichin g uranium to 60 per cent, craters were visible that were consistent with the US statement. “At this time, no one – including the IAEA – is in a position to assess the underground damage at Fordow,” it said.

The IAEA said other buildings were hit at the Esfahan nuclear site, including some related to the uranium conversion process, and that entrances to tunnels used for the storage of enriched material appeared to have been hit.

At a third site, the Natanz enrichment site, the fuel enrichment plant had been hit again. The US confirmed that it used ground-penetrating munitions.

The IAEA said Iran had informed it there had been no increase in off-site radiation levels at any of the three sites.

Get the full experience in the app

Scroll the Globe, Pick a Country, See their News

International stories that aren't found anywhere else.

Global News, Local Perspective

50 countries, 150 news sites, 500 articles a day.

Don’t Miss what Gets Missed

Explore international stories overlooked by American media.

Unfiltered, Uncensored, Unbiased

Articles are translated to English so you get a unique view into their world.

Apple App Store Badge