Gabbard Drops Mention of Iran Uranium Enrichment
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It is still possible that the US could use ground forces in some fashion. Further, the IDF has declined to provide confidence that the threat will be dealt with before the end of the war.
There are no indications that Iran has moved highly enriched uranium from the country’s major nuclear facilities that were attacked in June by the U.S. and Israel, the director of the International Atomic Energy Agency said Wednesday.
Recovering Iran’s remaining highly enriched uranium stockpile that is believed to be sitting in a storage facility deep underground, an objective the Trump administration has been discussing, would require a significant number of US ground troops beyond a small special operations footprint,
Any U.S.-Israeli attempt to seize Iran’s stockpile of enriched uranium would require a highly complex and unprecedented military
One of President Donald Trump’s main goals in the war involving Iran is to prevent the country from ever developing nuclear weapons. But beyond the ongoing airstrikes, a difficult question remains: what should happen to Iran’s existing stockpile of enriched uranium.
Israel in recent days has been discussing the possibility of carrying out air strikes to destroy what is left of Iran’s enriched uranium. However, the feasibility of such an option is unclear and a ground operation may be required to seize the uranium.
The use of artificial intelligence to generate real-time data on nuclear centrifuges aims to speed up fuel development for advanced reactors.
BWX Technologies has signed a memorandum of understanding with Oak Ridge National Laboratory to advance the Domestic Uranium Enrichment Centrifuge Experiment, or DUECE, which aims to restore a reliable domestic supply of enriched uranium for U.S. defense missions.