Highly doubtful. As late as November, The Hacking Team, a European forensic company, was offering a $1 million bounty for a hack that would break the Secure Enclave of the iPhone 5S and later. It went unclaimed.
(No, before someone asserts I am wrong, the $1 million bounty that WAS claimed in October was for a remote JAILBREAK of an already unlocked iPhone running iOS 9, which is NOT the same bounty for unlocking an LOCKED iPhone. Apple closed that vulnerability three weeks after the bounty was awarded to a team of hackers.)
Were it possible to unlock later iOS devices with such ease, there would NOT be hundreds of iOS devices stored in evidence lockers around the world waiting for such a tool. These Forensic IT companies are in the business of making money by unlocking mobile devices. . . they'd be unlocked.
Everything gets cracked and hacked eventually.
Nothing remains secure.