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Is Iran’s Nuclear Program Destroyed or Not?

A satellite image shows airstrike craters over the underground centrifuge halls of the Natanz Enrichment Facility, following US airstrikes amid the Iran-Israel conflict, in Natanz County, Iran, June 22, 2025. Photo: Maxar Technologies/Handout via REUTERS

The head of France’s DGSE intelligence agency, Nicolas Lerner, announced this week that Israel and the United States had overstated the impact of their strikes on Iran, claiming the nuclear program has been set back by only “a few months.”

By contrast, President Donald Trump has used terms like “total obliteration,” while Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu described the results as a “historic victory.” These are just a few of the conflicting voices regarding the success (or lack thereof) of Israel and America’s campaign to destroy Iran’s nuclear capacity.

So which is it? The answer: neither.

Almost everything we think we know is now irrelevant, and to understand the new reality requires an entirely new world view.

PDA/BDA assessments take months.

The whole assessment concept is part of the old world view, but let’s address it anyway, and then talk about why it’s irrelevant.

A truly accurate PDA (Physical Damage Assessment) or BDA (Bomb Damage Assessment) takes weeks to months to complete.

America’s Joint Chiefs of Staff’s “Methodology for Combat Assessment” describes PDA as taking place in three phases, each involving multiple intelligence sources. Truly reliable results become available only after completing Phase III, which historically has taken months to complete, such as after bombing campaigns in Kosovo, and Iraq and Afghanistan.

In short, anyone at this stage is — at best — communicating an unreliable Phase I or II assessment, or, at worst, is merely spouting agenda driven PR.

Trump and Netanyahu are probably right.

Again, this doesn’t really matter, but let’s explore it anyway.

Despite the limitations of PDA/BDA assessment methods, logic dictates that Trump and Netanyahu’s assessments of “total obliteration” and “historic victory” are probably correct, based on these three realities:

  1. Most of the bombs dropped on Iran have guidance systems which means they will consistently land exactly on target. Accuracy is measured by what’s called a “CEP” (Circular Error Probable) which ranges from 1 meter (about 3 feet) for certain smaller laser guided munitions, to 5 meters (about 20 feet) for the massive GBU-57 bombs which the United States dropped on Iran’s Fordo facility.
  2. As far as we know, Israel has superb intelligence on Iranian facilities, including their size, shape and composition, their depth, what type of geology surrounds them, and every other relevant factor.
  3. The United States and Israel employ plenty of experts in physics and mathematics. Dropping a known munition with high accuracy on a known target will produce scientifically predictable results.

Assuming all three of these assertions are true, it is highly likely that the Israeli and American bombing campaigns accomplished exactly what they intended. It is of course possible that there were some unknowns or surprises underground: for example, an unexpected change to the structure or a different geology than originally thought. For this reason we will not know the results for certain until after the Phase III assessments are completed.

However, none of that matters because…

This situation is not static, but dynamic.

This whole phrasing of how many months or years Iran’s nuclear program was “set back” is, in truth, utterly meaningless.

In order to know how far I am from a goal, I must know two things: where I am located in relation to that goal, and also how quickly I’m traveling. For example, if I want to get from Tel Aviv to New York, I must cover about 6,000 miles. By airplane that will take about 12 hours, by ship it will take several weeks, and if I sit on my couch and don’t move, then I will never arrive in New York at all.

We have some sense of where Iran’s facilities and resources stand in relation to the goal of producing a nuclear weapon, but how fast is Iran moving toward that goal?

Put aside for a moment that most of Iran’s nuclear scientists were killed in Israeli strikes, and that any remaining scientists might be rethinking their career choices right now. There is also a deeper reality, one that has changed the Middle East: Israel and the United States now command total air superiority over Iranian skies and impressive intelligence penetration into Iran’s military operations.

Previously, in order to slow Iran’s progress toward a nuclear weapon, the world was limited to UN inspections, subtle acts of sabotage or assassination, and negotiations. Yet now, with Iran’s proxy network in ruins, its air defenses laid waste, and its ballistic missile network degraded, we are living in a whole new world: one in which Israel or America can fly into Iran at any time and destroy pretty much anything they choose, even if it’s hidden hundreds of feet underneath a mountain.

So we return to the original question: at what pace is Iran moving toward a nuclear bomb? The answer is: it doesn’t matter, because any progress Iran makes can be promptly destroyed. Iran is, metaphorically speaking, like a traveler without a passport: he can go to the airport, but will never be allowed to travel.

China is rumored to be already resupplying Iran’s ballistic missile capacity (a rumor which China denies) and Iran has removed the International Atomic Energy Agency inspectors from the remains of its nuclear sites: a possible precursor to resuming illicit activities.

None of this matters if the world stays vigilant.

The true value of Israel’s impressive campaign against Iran’s nuclear facilities, and America’s impressive conclusion, lies not in the results of any specific damage assessment but in the now, fully open, skies over Iran. The free world has a new capacity to stop any future threats, but a change in Western politics or popular opinion could upend these hard won gains.

If Israel, America, and the entire free world remain both vigilant and active, then the potential for Iran, the Middle East and the entire world, is bright and unbounded by any deadline. Yet we will be safe only so long as we live up to our responsibility to protect that very safety.

Daniel Pomerantz is the CEO of RealityCheck, an organization dedicated to deepening public conversation through robust research studies and public speaking.

The post Is Iran’s Nuclear Program Destroyed or Not? first appeared on Algemeiner.com.

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Trump Hosts Qatari Prime Minister After Israeli Attack in Doha

Qatar’s Prime Minister and Minister for Foreign Affairs Sheikh Mohammed bin Abdulrahman bin Jassim Al-Thani attends an emergency meeting of the United Nations Security Council, following an Israeli attack on Hamas leaders in Doha, Qatar, at UN headquarters in New York City, US, Sept. 11, 2025. Photo: REUTERS/Eduardo Munoz

US President Donald Trump held dinner with the Qatari prime minister in New York on Friday, days after US ally Israel attacked Hamas leaders in Doha.

Israel attempted to kill the political leaders of Hamas with an attack in Qatar on Tuesday, a strike that risked derailing US-backed efforts to broker a truce in Gaza and end the nearly two-year-old conflict. The attack was widely condemned in the Middle East and beyond as an act that could escalate tensions in a region already on edge.

Trump expressed annoyance about the strike in a phone call with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and sought to assure the Qataris that such attacks would not happen again.

Trump and Qatari Prime Minister Sheikh Mohammed bin Abdulrahman al-Thani were joined by a top Trump adviser, US special envoy Steve Witkoff.

“Great dinner with POTUS. Just ended,” Qatar’s deputy chief of mission, Hamah Al-Muftah, said on X.

The White House confirmed the dinner had taken place but offered no details.

The session followed an hour-long meeting that al-Thani had at the White House on Friday with Vice President JD Vance and Secretary of State Marco Rubio.

A source briefed on the meeting said they discussed Qatar’s future as a mediator in the region and defense cooperation in the wake of the Israeli strikes against Hamas in Doha.

Trump said he was unhappy with Israel’s strike, which he described as a unilateral action that did not advance US or Israeli interests.

Washington counts Qatar as a strong Gulf ally. Qatar has been a main mediator in long-running negotiations for a ceasefire between Israel and Palestinian militant group Hamas in Gaza, for the release of Israeli hostages held in Gaza and for a post-conflict plan for the territory.

Al-Thani blamed Israel on Tuesday for trying to sabotage chances for peace but said Qatar would not be deterred from its role as mediator.

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Trump Urges NATO Countries to Halt Russian Oil Purchases

US President Donald Trump gestures during a cabinet meeting at the White House in Washington, DC, US, Aug. 26, 2025. Photo: Jonathan Ernst via Reuters Connect

i24 NewsUS President Donald Trump issued a letter to NATO nations on Saturday, impressing upon them to stop purchasing Russian oil and impose major sanctions on the regime of Vladimir Putin to end its war in Ukraine.

“I am ready to do major Sanctions on Russia when all NATO Nations have agreed, and started, to do the same thing, and when all NATO Nations STOP BUYING OIL FROM RUSSIA. As you know, NATO’S commitment to WIN has been far less than 100%, and the purchase of Russian Oil, by some, has been shocking! It greatly weakens your negotiating position, and bargaining power, over Russia,” the message read.

“Anyway, I am ready to ‘go’ when you are. Just say when? I believe that this, plus NATO, as a group, placing 50% to 100% TARIFFS ON CHINA, to be fully withdrawn after the WAR with Russia and Ukraine is ended, will also be of great help in ENDING this deadly, but RIDICULOUS, WAR. China has a strong control, and even grip, over Russia, and these powerful Tariffs will break that grip.”

Trump’s post comes after the recent flight of multiple Russian drones into Poland, widely perceived an escalatory move by Russia as it was entering the airspace of a NATO ally. Poland intercepted the drones, yet Trump played down the severity of the incident and Russia’s motives by saying it “could have been a mistake.”

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Netanyahu Says Getting Rid of Hamas Chiefs in Qatar Would Remove Main Obstacle to Gaza Deal

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu attends the US Independence Day reception, known as the annual “Fourth of July” celebration, hosted by Newsmax, in Jerusalem, Aug. 13, 2025. Photo: REUTERS/Ronen Zvulun/Pool

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said on Saturday that getting rid of Hamas chiefs living in Qatar would remove the main obstacle to releasing all hostages and ending the war in Gaza.

Israel on Tuesday targeted the Hamas leadership in Doha.

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