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Has Iran Completely Destroyed Its Nuclear Weapons Program?

By Elizabeth 一  Jul 18, 2025
  • AI Predict
  • Iran
  • Nuclear Weapons

B2 strikes Iran in Ghibli Style Created by Dreamface

Recent U.S. and Israeli strikes on Iran’s nuclear facilities in June 2025 have raised questions about the status of its nuclear weapons program. This article examines whether Iran has dismantled its program, analyzing strike impacts and global security implications.

This analysis is generated by Grok, created by xAI, using available data and trends to provide a reasoned prediction.

Predictive Analysis

Iran has not completely destroyed its nuclear weapons program, despite U.S. strikes on Fordow, Natanz, and Isfahan in June 2025. U.S. officials, including General Dan Caine, reported “severe damage” using 75 precision-guided missiles, but Iranian and Russian sources claim minimal impact, with critical infrastructure intact. Iran’s evacuation of key materials before the strikes, per 2025 Economic Times reports, suggests resilience. The IAEA reported no radiation spikes, indicating limited disruption.

Iran’s enriched uranium stockpile, at historic highs in 2025, could produce several bombs if weaponized, per IAEA chief Rafael Grossi. However, U.S. intelligence, including Tulsi Gabbard’s March 2025 testimony, assessed Iran halted its weapons program in 2003, though Trump disputes this. Dmitry Medvedev’s claim that countries like Russia and Pakistan may supply warheads escalates risks, though unverified. Iran’s retaliation threats and regional alliances suggest continued nuclear ambitions.

Conclusion: Iran’s program is damaged but not destroyed, with a 70-80% chance of resuming enrichment by 2026. Global security risks rise if Iran accelerates weaponization or receives external support.

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