Iran, Israel and nuclear weapons
Digest more
Top News
Overview
Impacts
Trump says he wants ‘real end’ to nuclear problem with Iran
Digest more
Top News
Overview
Impacts
Military vessels have relied on atomic energy for decades, but now commercial shipbuilders are attempting to tap the technology.
Nine countries currently either say they have nuclear weapons or are believed to possess them. The first to have nuclear arms were the five original nuclear weapons states — the United States, Russia, China, France and the United Kingdom.
Satellite images show multiple destroyed buildings at Natanz, one of Iran's most important nuclear facilities, after Israeli forces launched airstrikes on Friday.
An Israeli official said that "there's never a 100 percent guarantee," but "a nuclear disaster" should "not happen."
Explore more
Fordo is Iran’s second nuclear enrichment facility after Natanz, its main facility, which already has been targeted by Israeli airstrikes. The IAEA said Tuesday it believes the strikes have had “direct impacts” on the facility’s underground centrifuge halls.
Donald Trump’s efforts to strip federal agencies and commissions of their independence took an alarming step Monday, when the president fired one of the five commissioners who sit on the Nuclear Regulatory Commission.
President Donald Trump disputed the assessment from his director of national intelligence, Tulsi Gabbard, and the intelligence community, stating his belief that Iran was “very close” to developing a nuclear weapon prior to Israel’s attack on its facilities last week.
President Donald Trump fired Nuclear Regulatory Commissioner Christopher Hanson on Friday, abruptly ousting the Biden appointee as part of an