Iran Carried Out Implosion Tests for Nuclear Weapons Development, IAEA Reports
- Iran conducted implosion tests crucial for nuclear weapon development, as reported by the International Atomic Energy Agency .
- The IAEA noted that Iran increased its stockpile of near-weapons grade uranium from 133.8 kilograms in February to 408.6 kilograms by May.
- An Iranian resistance group claims that Iran is operating a secret nuclear weapons project called the Kavir Plan.
- President Donald Trump expressed frustration with Iran during negotiations, stating they must abandon their plans.
48 Articles
48 Articles
The Israeli airstrikes on uranium facilities are throwing back Iran's nuclear program, but how far were the mullahs really in the construction of nuclear weapons?
Nuclear bomb, atomic bomb, atomic bomb: Whether Israel's blow against Iran, the attacks on Russia's planes or the SPD Manifesto – how nuclear weapons dominate thinking.
Israel claims to be certain that Tehran's military programme is about to succeed. An IAEA report also mentions fears about this. For its part, the Iranian regime claims to be pursuing a civilian nuclear programme and not seeking to acquire the atomic weapon. - "They have one or two years before building a real bomb": what is the status of Iran's nuclear programme? (International).
Robert Wilkie to Newsmax: Iran Was Within Days, Weeks of Nuke Bomb
Robert Wilkie, secretary for Veterans Affairs in the first Trump administration, told Newsmax on Friday night that Israel had to strike Iran now because the Islamic republic was close to creating a nuclear weapon. “Most of the Israeli contacts I’ve had have told me that they believe that the ayatollahs were rushing and were within days, maybe weeks of being able to put a weapon on a missile,” Wilkie told host Rick Leventhal as part of Newsmax’s …
Israel's attack on Iran could lead to Iran acquiring nuclear weapons. That is the assessment made by Erika Holmquist, a researcher at the Swedish National Defense Research Institute (FOI). “There is an imminent risk that Iran will leave the Non-Proliferation Treaty and acquire nuclear weapons,” she says.


How close is Iran to building nuclear weapons – and has Israeli strike changed this?
The attack on one of Iran’s main nuclear sites delivered a clear message: Israel had run out of patience. Multiple explosions were heard and thick palls of smoke and flames could be seen over Natanz nuclear facility.
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