Iran’s Ghost Uranium: 400kg Disappears After US Strikes, Raising Spy Fears | DETAILS | World News

The threatening 400 kilograms of the 60 percent enriched uranium, which was 60 percent enriched for a maximum of 10 nuclear weapons, disappeared after the “Bunker Buster” attacks against the three Central Iranian nuclear facilities of last week. US Vice President JD Vance, the American publisher ABC News has a missing material and Iran’s nuclear intentions increase the fears, he said.
Reports, including the Israeli officials quoted in the New York Times, said Iran’s terrible US strikes, as well as some machines, as well as some machines may have changed. Satellite photographs taken before the US attack revealed 16 truck regiments built out of the Fordow nuclear facility, a setup built in the depths of a mountain and is considered to be largely immune to traditional missile attacks. These paintings urged Israel to send the US to send B-2 “Spirit” bombing planes and GBU-37 “Bunker Busters” on Sunday.
Strong bombs targeted Iran’s Fordow, Natanz and Isfahan nuclear facilities. After leave, satellite images confirmed great damage to all three sites, but the trucks previously seen in Fordow were not prominent. While the full content and target of the movement has been uncertain, the US and Israeli intelligence suspects that it has moved to another underground storage facility near Isfahan’s old capital.
Rafael Grossi, General Manager of the International Atomic Energy Agency, said the world nuclear keeper, lost uranium last Israel’s first strike against Iran just a week ago, he said. Last week, Grossi forcibly applied to the United Nations Security Council for a “basic” need for the IAEA inspectors to return to their key work in Iran as soon as possible. He warned that more military climbing will only postpone this “indispensable job” and sharply reduce the chance of a diplomatic solution to prevent Iran from receiving nuclear weapons.
Iran’s nuclear intentions: contradictory stories
Iran has always insisted that the nuclear program was for peaceful purposes. Nevertheless, Israel’s logic towards the latest missile strikes revolved around the allegations that Tehran approached a “return point” in his search for nuclear weapons. After the Israeli attacks, Iran threatened to leave the silver -prevention agreement (NPT), which aims to prevent nuclear proliferation, the keystone of the global system. Iran’s Deputy Foreign Minister Takht Ravanchi strongly rejected the proposals to give up the program and declared “no one can tell us what to do.”
The account of the US status as the US’s nuclear weapon state was still subjected to some disombobulation. Last week, a CNN report, published after Israel’s first missile strike, said that US intelligence is not actively looking for Iran’s nuclear weapons and is at least three years away from having the ability to make one. Intelligence also showed that Israel’s missile strikes delay Iran for a few months thanks to the deeply embedded place of central research facilities such as Fordow. However, a senior official told CNN that Iran has all the necessary materials for a nuclear weapon.
In addition to the turmoil, US National Intelligence Director Tulsi Gabbard seemed to contradict the previous statement before the Congress, which Iran claimed to have developed nuclear weapons. He changed his assessment on Saturday and determined that Iran could “make them” weeks “. This change allowed President Donald Trump to refuse the previous Intel as “wrong”.
President Trump had previously given Iran a two -week deadline to accept a new nuclear protection agreement. However, after confirming that intelligence could not effectively neutralize all Iranian facilities without Israel’s American aid, it launched US strikes.
“We are not part of it.” On Sunday morning, Trump urged Iran and Israel to arrive in an agreement just a few hours before the US strike, just a few hours before the US strike. Following the successful attack, Trump said that Iran’s nuclear program was “completely and completely destroyed” by using “Bunker Busters” and trap Tomahawk missiles and celebrated the 37-hour military campaign from a Missouri air base.