
Iran Mined Entrance to Bombed Nuclear Site to Deter Raid on Enriched Uranium
Iran has, in recent weeks, deliberately collapsed tunnels and mined the entrances to its bombed Isfahan nuclear complex in a bid to stop the United States from launching a raid to retrieve the regime’s store of highly enriched uranium believed to be buried at the site. The assessment, drawn from five sources familiar with U.S. intelligence, came to light on Saturday, June 13.
Retrieving the uranium would now be far more difficult and dangerous for anyone — including the Iranians themselves — than it was at the start of the war, when U.S. President Donald Trump weighed a ground operation to seize the stockpile. The fate of the enriched material has become one of the central issues in an emerging deal between Iran and the United States to end the conflict.
A former senior nuclear official cautioned that Tehran’s move also raised the risk that it could later claim to be unable to retrieve some of the material. A U.S. official said on Friday, June 12, that the emerging memorandum of understanding “leads to” Washington obtaining Iran’s highly enriched uranium, explaining that under the agreement the material would be destroyed on site and then taken out of the country.
(TOI/VFI News)
“For there is nothing covered, that shall not be revealed; neither hid, that shall not be known.” – Luke 12:2