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According to a high -paste Israeli official, Iran believes that Iran can potentially gain enriched uranium, buried under one of three US forces.
Speaking to US journalists, the official said the achievement of the enriched uranium in Isfahan would be very difficult, and any attempt will push Israeli strikes.
Donald Trump has repeatedly claimed that in June, US air and missile strikes in Iran have “destroyed” the country’s nuclear facilities, even if some US intelligence services have taken a more cautious view.
Iran denies the desire to develop nuclear weapons and says uranium enrichment is for peaceful purposes.
At a briefing for journalists in Washington, a senior Israeli official – who has refused the name – said the intelligence shows that most of Iran’s uranium enriched in Isfahan, who was struck by a submarine bed during the Midnight Hammer Operation on June 22.
However, the official did not express concern about the assessment, noting that any Iran’s attempt to restore the material will probably be revealed.
According to the official, Israel’s assessment is that Iran’s nuclear program has been created for two years.
Trump and his administration members were unwavering that Iranian nuclear facilities were completely destroyed.
“As President Trump said many times, Midnight Hammer’s operation has completely destroyed Iran’s nuclear facilities,” said White House press, Anna Kelly said in a statement to the US media. “The whole world is safer thanks to its decisive leadership.”
BBC contacted the White House for further comment.
The US intelligence evaluations were more cautious, and the report on the leakage of a pre -defense intelligence agency, which lies that while all three sites – in Ford, Natantsa and Isfahan – were badly damaged, they were not completely destroyed.
At the end of June, CIA Director John Ratcliff told us that the destruction of a single Iranian institution for the production of metal uranium effectively seized Iran’s ability to build nuclear weapons.
The head of the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA), Rafael Grosi, told CBS, a US BBC partner that while three target Iranian sites were “destroyed to an important degree”, parts “still stand”.
“Honestly, it is impossible to say that everything has disappeared, and there is nothing,” Mr. Gross said.
In an interview with the Conservative commentator Tucker Carlson, published earlier this week, Iranian President Mahmoud Pescin said the funds were “badly damaged”.
“That’s why we do not have access to them,” he said, adding that a complete assessment is impossible.