The Iran strikes: How effective were US bombs, really?


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Summary

Damage estimates

United States strikes damaged Iran’s nuclear infrastructure but fell short of destroying underground facilities, according to a preliminary Defense Intelligence Agency assessment, which estimates Iran could resume operations within a few months.

More intelligence needed

Retired Lt. Gen. Mark Weatherington cautions against early conclusions, emphasizing the complexity of assessing damage to deep underground sites and calling for an analysis of multiple sources of intelligence to accurately determine the long-term impact.

Threat not resolved

The White House maintains the strikes were a total success, but intelligence sources and analysts warn Iran still retains the capability to eventually produce weapon-grade uranium, leaving the broader nuclear threat unresolved.


Full story

The Trump administration and Israeli leaders called it a decisive blow to Iran’s nuclear program. Even Iran’s Foreign Ministry acknowledges the strikes caused “excessive and serious damage.” But a growing body of intelligence and seasoned military voices are casting doubt on just how far back the United States’ strikes on Iran pushed Tehran’s nuclear ambitions.

A preliminary assessment from the Pentagon’s Defense Intelligence Agency (DIA) concluded that the June 21 airstrikes may have delayed Iran’s nuclear work by only a few months. That’s a far cry from U.S. President Donald Trump’s claim of “total obliteration.” And while military officials said the “bunker-buster” bombs performed as intended, the deeper question — how much of Iran’s nuclear infrastructure was actually destroyed? — is proving harder to answer.

Bombs on target, but big picture still blurry

The air campaign, known as Operation Midnight Hammer, struck Iran’s key nuclear sites at Fordo, Natanz and Isfahan. The Air Force dropped 14 Massive Ordnance Penetrators — 30,000-pound bombs designed to smash through reinforced underground structures on Fordo and Natanz. A submarine struck Isfahan with 30 Tomahawk cruise missiles.

“A bomb has three effects that cause damage: blast, fragmentation and overpressure,” said Gen. Dan Caine, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff. At Fordo and Netanz, he said, “the primary kill mechanism was a mix of overpressure and blast ripping through the open tunnels and destroying critical hardware.”

While Caine and Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth touted the strikes as a success, the initial DIA report paints a murkier picture. The assessment — based on preliminary intelligence and satellite imagery — concluded that the bombs caved in entrances and damaged infrastructure at the nuclear enrichment site. However, the assessment found, the underground facilities themselves did not collapse.

Reuters cited a source familiar with the findings who said Iran’s ability to restart operations hinges on “how long it takes them to dig out and build or repair” damaged systems like power and water supplies.

Precision isn’t certainty

Retired Lt. Gen. Mark Weatherington, former deputy commander of Air Force Global Strike Command, urged the public and policymakers alike to take a breath.

“The first thing that’s going to happen is the crew, or a follow-on crew, might observe some effects on the target,” Weatherington said. “Yes, the weapons released. They released in certain parameters. But that’s just the first layer.”

Weatherington said early observations, while positive, are inherently limited.

“It really doesn’t tell you anything about the impact on the target area, especially with a target like this, because it is so deep and so obscured from direct observation,” he said. “ I think that’s what part of the challenge was when you had some initial reporting coming out — one source, one day’s worth of information or less, right? Just a small set of observations. That’s going to be a low-confidence type of thing, right?” 

Weatherington said a meaningful battle damage assessment draws intelligence from multiple sources, including satellite data, air sampling, signals analysis and human assets. Only then, he said, can analysts determine whether Iran’s capacity to enrich uranium has truly been neutralized, or just delayed.

“This is not a game-winning field goal as time expired,” Weatherington warned. “We didn’t just win the Super Bowl, and we can all say, ‘Thank goodness that’s over.’ The question is, how much will Iran compete? How much will they continue to drive on a nuclear program? Did this increase their ambition or drive in that way?”

White House pushes back on intelligence

The White House dismissed the DIA assessment as premature and incorrect.

“Everyone knows what happens when you drop 14, 30,000-pound bombs perfectly on their targets: total obliteration,” White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt said.

Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth echoed that line. “Based on everything we have seen — and I’ve seen it all — our bombing campaign obliterated Iran’s ability to create nuclear weapons,” Hegseth said during a Thursday, June 26 briefing with reporters. “The impact of those bombs is buried under a mountain of rubble in Iran.”

But analysts caution that deeply buried facilities like Fordo may not show obvious damage from space. According to The Washington Post, some uranium-enrichment centrifuges may have survived the strikes, and Iran’s stockpile of highly enriched uranium — enough for roughly nine warheads — remains unaccounted for.

David Albright, a former United Nations nuclear inspector, said the attacks probably destroyed Iran’s current enrichment efforts but did not erase the long-term threat.

“Iran retains an ability to break out and produce weapon-grade uranium,” Albright wrote on X.

Not all intelligence agrees

Diverging assessments from the intelligence community are not unusual in the early stages of a complex operation, especially one involving fortified, subterranean targets. But the stakes — both nuclear and political — are immense.

Democratic leaders remain unconvinced of the effectiveness of Operation Midnight Hammer.

“There’s zero evidence that I’ve seen that the nuclear program was completely and totally obliterated as Donald Trump has claimed,” House Democratic Leader Hakeem Jeffries said.

Classified briefings for Congress originally set for Tuesday, June 24 were abruptly canceled, leaving lawmakers and the public with more questions than answers. Those briefings were eventually held on Friday, June 27, but elected leaders left the meetings split along party lines. However, Weatherington said, uncertainty is endemic to this kind of warfare.

“There’s so many more factors, so many more variables, so much more information that must be gathered to build confidence in that reporting,” he said. “We shouldn’t have expected it to be any different.”

The bigger strategic question

Whether the strikes damaged Iran’s capabilities to produce nuclear weapons in the short term or not, Weatherington warns the broader contest is far from over.

Iran’s regime is “a thinking, reacting adversary,” he said. “They certainly have ingenuity. They certainly have determination.” 

Even though the strikes changed the strategic environment in the Middle East, Weatherington said, “we shouldn’t think it changed this competition with Iran forever.”

The true impact of the strikes may not be measured in craters or collapsed shafts, but in Iran’s next moves and whether the cycle of confrontation slows down or spirals out of control.

Cassandra Buchman (Digital Producer) contributed to this report.
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Why this story matters

The debate over the effectiveness of recent United States airstrikes on Iran's nuclear facilities highlights uncertainty about their impact and raises questions about long-term regional security, the credibility of official claims and the future of nuclear nonproliferation efforts.

Effectiveness of military action

The conflicting assessments between U.S. officials and intelligence agencies about the true damage to Iran’s nuclear capabilities underscore the uncertainty inherent in evaluating the outcomes of complex military operations.

Political and intelligence divide

Divergent views between the White House, defense officials, intelligence agencies and lawmakers reveal how national security events can become politicized and obscure objective analysis.

Regional security and nuclear proliferation

The uncertainty surrounding the strikes’ impact on Iran’s nuclear ambitions raises broader concerns about the stability of the Middle East and the challenges of preventing nuclear proliferation.

Get the big picture

Synthesized coverage insights across 22 media outlets

Debunking

Conflicting claims exist surrounding the extent of the damage. While President Donald Trump described the strikes as having "obliterated" facilities and set the program back by years, a leaked Pentagon assessment, according to some reports, suggested the setback could be only a few months. Independent verification remains unavailable due to restricted access for inspectors.

Global impact

The strikes and subsequent Iranian legislative responses threaten the established system of international nuclear oversight. Iran’s move to suspend cooperation with the International Atomic Energy Agency creates uncertainty about future monitoring, escalating nuclear proliferation concerns and raising the stakes for regional stability, potentially prompting international diplomatic efforts or further sanctions.

Oppo research

Opponents of US and Israeli policy argue that military intervention has complicated prospects for renewed diplomatic talks and increased instability rather than enhancing security. Critics of Iran’s hard-line policies warn that severing cooperation with international agencies may further isolate the country and prompt more aggressive international responses.

Bias comparison

  • Media outlets on the left generally de-emphasizes emotive language, focusing instead on the complexity and internal contradictions within Iran’s leadership, such as the foreign minister admitting “serious damage” while the supreme leader downplays it, highlighting diplomatic complications and nuanced assessments of the strikes.
  • Not enough unique coverage from media outlets in the center to provide a bias comparison.
  • Media outlets on the right emphasize Iran’s “hardening stance," using charged terms like “rare honesty” and “obliterated” to underscore what they say is Iranian vulnerability.

Media landscape

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22 total sources

Key points from the Left

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  • No coverage from Far Left sources 0 sources
  • No coverage from Left sources 0 sources
  • No coverage from Lean Left sources 0 sources

Key points from the Center

  • The United States launched air strikes last week on Iran's nuclear sites at Natanz, Fordo and Isfahan in support of ally Israel.
  • These strikes followed a 12-day conflict beginning June 13, during which Israel targeted Iran’s nuclear and military infrastructure and Iran responded with missile attacks.
  • Iran’s Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi admitted on state TV that the attacks inflicted serious and excessive damage but said Tehran is still assessing the full extent.

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Key points from the Right

  • Iran's Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi stated there was "serious" damage to Iran's nuclear sites due to a recent war with Israel.
  • Experts from Iran's Atomic Energy Organization are currently assessing the full extent of the damage to the nuclear facilities.
  • Araghchi emphasized that demanding compensation for the damage has become an important issue on Iran's diplomatic agenda.

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