Everything You Need to Know About Iran’s Nuclear Program
- On Friday, Israel launched wide-ranging strikes targeting Iran's nuclear facilities, ballistic missile factories, and senior military leaders.
- The attacks followed the IAEA’s Thursday declaration that Iran breached its nuclear non-proliferation obligations amid long-standing Israeli concerns about Iran’s nuclear arsenal potential.
- Iran enriches uranium to 60% at two sites including Natanz, which reportedly sustained damage, and holds over 9,200 kilograms of enriched uranium, surpassing 2015 deal limits.
- The IAEA reports that Iran possesses enough uranium enriched close to weapons-grade levels to potentially assemble around 10 nuclear warheads if further processed, while Netanyahu stated that the recent operation targeted a central facility critical to Iran's nuclear enrichment efforts.
- These strikes highlight escalating regional tensions and underline challenges for diplomatic efforts to limit Iran’s nuclear capabilities, with Israel framing the operation as vital to its survival.
133 Articles
133 Articles
The Iranian nuclear program began long before the Islamic Revolution of 1979 – with the support of the USA. However, since the late 1990s, the country has been pursuing an ambiguous program: officially for civilian purposes, in fact with military intentions.
With a "preventive strike" Israel attacks targets in Iran. The massive attack is directed against military facilities and nuclear facilities, it says. Where are the centers of the Iranian nuclear program? A first overview with maps and satellite images.
Israel's attack has applied to nuclear facilities and military facilities in Iran. An overview of the nuclear facilities.
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- 60% of the sources are Center
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