US intelligence indicates limited new damage to Iran's nuclear program, sources say

Latest US-Israeli attacks have resulted in civilian deaths, but Israel claims to hit several nuclear facilities

Iranian state TV said the strike in Dimona, home to a nuclear facility, was retaliation for an earlier attack on its Natanz nuclear site. PHOTO: AFP

US intelligence assessments indicate that the time Iran would ​need to build a nuclear weapon has not changed since last summer, when analysts estimated that a US-Israeli attack had pushed back the timeline to up to a year, according to three sources familiar ‌with the matter.

The assessments of Tehran's nuclear program remain broadly unchanged even after two months of a war that US President Donald Trump launched in tandem with Israel, killing over a hundred schoolchildren on the first day of bombardment.

The latest US and Israeli attacks that began on February 28 have resulted in many civilian deaths, but Israel has claimed to have hit several significant nuclear facilities.

The war has ceased since the US and Iran agreed to a truce on April 7 to pursue peace. Tensions remain high as both sides appear deeply divided, and as Iran has choked traffic through the Strait of Hormuz.

Secretary ​of Defence Pete Hegseth has said publicly that the US aims to ensure Iran does not obtain a nuclear weapon via ongoing negotiations with Tehran.

US intelligence agencies had claimed before June's 12-day war that Iran likely could produce enough bomb-grade uranium for a weapon and build a bomb in around three to six months, said two of the sources, all of whom requested anonymity to discuss US intelligence.

Read: Fire at UAE’s Fujairah port not a planned Iranian attack, says Iranian military official

Following the June ​strikes by the US that hit the Natanz, Fordow and Isfahan nuclear complexes, US intelligence estimates pushed that timeline back to about nine months to a year, said the two sources and a person familiar with the assessments.

The attacks destroyed or badly ​damaged the three enrichment plants known to have been operating at the time. But the UN nuclear watchdog has been unable to verify the whereabouts of some 440 kilograms of uranium enriched to 60%. It believes that about half was stored in an underground tunnel complex at the Isfahan Nuclear Research Centre, but it has been unable to confirm that since inspections were suspended.

The International Atomic Energy Agency assesses that the total HEU stockpile would be enough for 10 bombs if further enriched.

“While Operation Midnight Hammer obliterated Iran’s nuclear facilities, Operation Epic Fury built on this ​success by decimating Iran’s defence industrial base that they once leveraged as a protective shield around their pursuit of a nuclear weapon," said White House spokeswoman Olivia Wales, referring to the June operation and the latest war that began in February.

"President ​Trump has long been clear that Iran can never have a nuclear weapon – and he does not bluff”.

The Office of the Director of National Intelligence did not respond to a request for comment.

Stopping Tehran's 'nuclear program' a key US goal

US officials, including Trump, repeatedly claim that the need to ⁠eliminate Iran's nuclear program is a key objective of the war.

"Iran can never be allowed to obtain a nuclear weapon. That is the goal of this operation,⁩" Vice President JD Vance wrote on X on March 2.

The unchanging estimate of how long it would take Iran to build such a weapon reflects in part the focus of the latest US and Israeli military campaign, the sources said.

While Israel has struck nuclear-related targets, including a uranium-processing facility in late March, US attacks have concentrated on civilian infrastructure, assassinating Iranian leadership and attempting to destroy its military-industrial base, among other conventional military targets.

Read more: Hormuz ship traffic stays limited as only 4 commercial vessels transit in 24 hours

The unchanged estimates may also stem from a lack of major nuclear targets that can be readily and safely destroyed following June's military action, according to some analysts.

Eric Brewer, a former senior US intelligence ​analyst who led assessments of Iran's nuclear program, said it ​was not surprising that the assessments have not changed ⁠because recent US strikes have not prioritised nuclear-related targets.

"Iran still possesses all of its nuclear material, as far as we know," said Brewer, vice president of the nuclear materials study program at the Nuclear Threat Initiative arms control think tank. "That material is probably located in deeply buried underground sites where US munitions can't penetrate."

In recent weeks, US officials have contemplated operations which ​would significantly impede Iran's nuclear enrichment efforts. Those options include ground raids to retrieve the HEU believed to be stored in the tunnel complex at the Isfahan site.

Iran has repeatedly ​denied seeking nuclear weapons. US intelligence ⁠agencies and the IAEA say Tehran halted a warhead development effort in 2003, though Israel claims that it "secretly" preserved key parts of the program.

Possible impact from killing of scientists

Precisely evaluating Iran's nuclear capacity is difficult, even for the world's leading intelligence services, say experts.

Several US intelligence agencies have independently studied Iran's nuclear program, and while the sources described a broad consensus regarding Iran's capacity to build a nuclear weapon, outlier assessments do occur.

Some officials, including US Secretary of State Marco Rubio, have argued that US strikes on Iranian air defences have reduced the nuclear threat by diminishing ​Iran's ability to defend its nuclear sites should it decide to rush toward weaponisation in the future.

There is also the impact of Israel's assassinations of Iran's leading nuclear scientists.

David Albright, a former UN nuclear inspector who runs the Institute for Science and International Security, said the killings have added significant uncertainty ​to Tehran's ability to build a bomb that would function as intended.

"I think everyone agrees knowledge can't be bombed, but know-how certainly can be destroyed," he said.

Load Next Story