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Israel’s strikes zeroed in on Iran’s nuclear program. How much damage was done? (Isfahan Natanz Fordow)
CNN-MSN ^ | 6 16 | Rob Picheta and Thomas Bordeaux

Posted on 06/16/2025 9:31:28 AM PDT by dennisw

Natanz Initial assessments indicate that Israel’s strikes on Iran’s Natanz nuclear facility were extremely effective, going far beyond superficial damage to exterior structures and knocking out the electricity on the lower levels where the centrifuges used to enrich uranium are stored, two US officials told CNN.

“This was a full-spectrum blitz,” said another source familiar with the assessments.

The strikes destroyed the above-ground part of Natanz’s Pilot Fuel Enrichment Plant, a sprawling site that has been operating since 2003 and where Iran had been enriching uranium up to 60% purity

Satellite images, taken before and after the strikes, give a closer view of the impact.

The original image was taken by Maxar Technologies in January. The more recent photo, taken on Saturday after the attacks, shows at least two buildings seriously impacted.

Electrical infrastructure at Natanz – including the main power supply building, plus emergency and back-up generators – was also destroyed, the IAEA said. That assessment is supported by the two US officials, who told CNN that electricity was knocked out on the lower levels where the centrifuges are.

That aspect of the operation is crucial, because much of the Natanz facility is heavily fortified and underground, so wiping out the power to those parts of the facility is the most effective way to impact underground equipment and machinery.

It does not appear that Israel damaged those underground parts of the plant directly, the IAEA said, but the loss of power to the underground cascade hall “may have damaged the centrifuges there.”

Centrifuges are machines that can enrich uranium by spinning the gas at high speeds. “These are machines that spin at the speed of light, and if they are suddenly turned off, some of them might explode or suffer unrecoverable damage,”

(Excerpt) Read more at msn.com ...


TOPICS: Crime/Corruption; Culture/Society; Foreign Affairs; Front Page News; Government; Iran; Israel; Politics/Elections; War on Terror
KEYWORDS: frneocons; newirancookie; specialiransock; zeepermadness
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Natanz has six above-ground buildings and three underground buildings, two of which can hold 50,000 centrifuges

Iran's Isfahan Natanz Fordow nuclear sites all get analyzed to see how much Israel damaged them. Go to the source here.

1 posted on 06/16/2025 9:31:28 AM PDT by dennisw
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To: dennisw

Not enough


2 posted on 06/16/2025 9:34:47 AM PDT by Skwor
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To: dennisw

FTA ““These are machines that spin at the speed of light,”

Total BS


3 posted on 06/16/2025 9:36:15 AM PDT by Skwor
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To: dennisw
These are machines that spin at the speed of light

Warp speed, Mr Achmed.

4 posted on 06/16/2025 9:36:34 AM PDT by Magnum44 (...against all enemies, foreign and domestic... )
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To: dennisw

” . . . that spin at the speed of light,” - They have invented relativistic enrichment?


5 posted on 06/16/2025 9:36:44 AM PDT by Strident (<Null_Table> . . . )
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To: dennisw

“These are machines that spin at the speed of light...”


So does time slow down when they’re going that fast?


6 posted on 06/16/2025 9:37:41 AM PDT by hanamizu ( )
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To: Magnum44

Next up, Ludacris Speed!

Yes Mr. Dark Helmet!


7 posted on 06/16/2025 9:38:30 AM PDT by Skwor
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To: dennisw
These are machines that spin at the speed of light

Wow, they really have made some technical progress!

8 posted on 06/16/2025 9:40:38 AM PDT by Billthedrill
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To: Skwor

9 posted on 06/16/2025 9:41:44 AM PDT by Magnum44 (...against all enemies, foreign and domestic... )
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To: dennisw

I’m really surprised Israel hasn’t spent a decade cooking up a giant drone that can drop a 20,000 MOP.

In fact, I’ll be willing to bet that they have.

They’re just waiting to make sure there are zero air defenses left.


10 posted on 06/16/2025 9:42:29 AM PDT by TheThirdRuffian (Orange is the new brown)
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To: dennisw

““These are machines that spin at the speed of light,…”

Um, no they don’t.

But bomb them another 3 or 4 times just to be sure.

L


11 posted on 06/16/2025 9:42:57 AM PDT by Lurker ( Peaceful coexistence with the Left is not possible. Stop pretending that it is.)
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To: dennisw
Continues:

Isfahan
The extent of damage at the Isfahan nuclear site in central Iran was more difficult to parse in the hours after it was struck, with conflicting claims over the attack’s impact emerging in Israel and Iran.

However, the IAEA said later Saturday that four critical buildings at the site were damaged.

That assessment seemed to contradict earlier claims from Behrouz Kamalvandi, the spokesperson for the Atomic Energy Organization of Iran, who said Saturday that damage at the site - Iran’s largest nuclear research complex - was limited. A shed at the facility caught fire, he said.

Israel was more bullish; an IDF official said during a Saturday briefing that the site took significant damage.

Satellite imagery of the site on Saturday showed clear damage to three structures in the sprawling complex. The fourth cited by the IAEA was not immediately visible in the imagery.

But it is less obvious what material impact the damage had. Kamalvandi said equipment at two facilities - Natanz and Isfahan - had been moved in anticipation of the strikes, a claim that CNN cannot independently verify.

The facility was built with support from China and opened in 1984, the NTI says. According to the non-profit, 3,000 scientists are employed at Isfahan, and the site is “suspected of being the center” of Iran’s nuclear program.

It “operates three small Chinese-supplied research reactors,” as well as a “conversion facility, a fuel production plant, a zirconium cladding plant, and other facilities and laboratories,” the NTI says.

At a Saturday briefing, an IDF official said Israel had “concrete intelligence” that Iran was “moving forward to a nuclear bomb” at the Isfahan facility. Despite advancing its uranium enrichment significantly, Iran has repeatedly said that its nuclear program is for peaceful purposes and denied that it was developing an atomic bomb.

Fordow
The Fordow Fuel Enrichment Plant is a far more difficult site to target. The plant is buried deep in the mountains near Qom, in northern Iran, and houses advanced centrifuges used to enrich uranium up to high grades of purity.

Israel targeted the site during its Friday attacks, but the IAEA said it was not impacted and the IDF has not claimed any significant damage there. Iranian air defenses shot down an Israeli drone in the vicinity of the plant, Iranian state media outlet Press TV reported Friday evening.

“The expectation has always been that Israel would not be able to reach (Fordow), because it would need the kind of bunker-buster, massive ordinance bombs that only the United States has,” Vaez said.

Satellite imagery appears to support that assessment. Little damage appears visible in the below image, taken by Maxar on Saturday.

Fordow’s fate could be pivotal to the overall success of Israel’s attacks.

In 2023, the Vienna-based International Atomic Energy Agency confirmed that uranium particles enriched to 83.7% purity - which is close to the 90% enrichment levels needed to make a nuclear bomb - had been found in Fordow.

“If Fordow remains operational, Israel’s attacks may barely slow Iran’s path to the bomb,” James M. Acton, co-director of the Nuclear Policy Program at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, wrote on Friday.

Acton said Israel might be able to collapse the entrance to the facility, but noted that destroying much more of the Fordow site would be a difficult task for Israel.

Other targets
The Arak nuclear facility in central Iran appeared to ride out the first wave of Israeli strikes unscathed. That site houses a heavy water nuclear reactor which has concerned the West, because heavy water (or deuterium oxide) can be used to produce plutonium - a second pathway to a potential nuclear bomb.

A satellite image taken on 14 June shows no visible damage to Iran's Arak Nuclear Complex. - Maxar Technologies

Attacking nuclear infrastructure was Israel’s main objective, but its strikes also targeted a number of other sites associated with Iran’s military and its secretive Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC).

A missile facility in Kermanshah, western Iran, took on heavy damage, according to imagery from Maxar.

A satellite image shows significant damage to buildings at Iran's Kermanshah Missile Facility after repeated Israeli strikes on the site. Satellite image ©2025 Maxar Technologies. - Maxar Technologies


Piranshahr, near the Iraqi border in western Iran, overhead imagery shows a small military building largely flattened by strikes. The earlier image from Maxar Technologies was taken last month, and vehicles are visible for scale.

And in western Tehran, a large building at an IRGC facility appears significantly damaged, with much of its roof blown off.

The chief of the IRGC, Maj. Gen. Hossein Salami, was one of the key military figures killed in Israel’s strikes on Friday.
12 posted on 06/16/2025 9:43:55 AM PDT by PIF (They came for me and mine ... now its your turn)
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To: TheThirdRuffian

Why not just ask The Donald to provide the service?


13 posted on 06/16/2025 9:46:27 AM PDT by Cobra64 (ECommon sense isn’t common anymore.)
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To: dennisw

IDF commando op.
Go in - kill them all


14 posted on 06/16/2025 9:46:52 AM PDT by Palio di Siena (Kralik…..you get the wallet)
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To: dennisw
It does not appear that Israel damaged those underground parts of the plant directly, the IAEA said, but the loss of power to the underground cascade hall “may have damaged the centrifuges there.”

IOW it wasn't enough. If those centrifuges remain, the enrichment capability remains. They need to be destroyed.

15 posted on 06/16/2025 9:47:09 AM PDT by Carry_Okie (The tree of liberty needs a rope.)
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To: Skwor

Hmmm...
Light speed?

That could mean that they already have at least 4,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,023 tons of enriched uranium down there...


16 posted on 06/16/2025 9:47:54 AM PDT by SuperLuminal (Where is rabble-rising Sam Adams now that we need him? Is his name Trump, now?)
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To: dennisw

Expect the US to go in and secure these facilities and inventory everything to determine which countries had a hand in supplying this hardware. From there, expect us to drag those countries through the mud. Geopolitical leverage. The Great Game.


17 posted on 06/16/2025 9:52:17 AM PDT by HockeyPop
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To: dennisw

Hit ‘em again! Hit ‘em again! Harder! Harder!


18 posted on 06/16/2025 9:58:19 AM PDT by Mr Ramsbotham ("God is a spirit, and man His means of walking on the earth.")
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To: Mr Ramsbotham

Drop your bombs between the minarets!


19 posted on 06/16/2025 10:00:31 AM PDT by dfwgator (Endut! Hoch Hech!)
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To: Skwor
What speed will they go in Spaceballs 2?

Bleach bit speed?

20 posted on 06/16/2025 10:02:51 AM PDT by Tell It Right (1 Thessalonians 5:21 -- Put everything to the test, hold fast to that which is true.)
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