Iran, uranium
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12don MSN
Capturing Iran’s highly enriched uranium would require a large US ground force, sources say
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,
The Trump administration is exploring options to take control of Iran’s highly enriched uranium stockpile, including a potential operation
Landing in hostile territory and quickly extracting Iran’s highly enriched uranium would be next to impossible.
3don MSNOpinion
Iran’s hidden mountain nuclear site raises urgent threat, must be ‘neutralized': reports
Andrea Stricker warns U.S. must neutralize Iran's Pickaxe Mountain nuclear site and secure uranium stockpiles before ending combat operations.
The Trump administration considers options to secure or extract highly enriched uranium from Iran, potentially involving Joint Special Operations Command forces.
The fate of the highly enriched uranium and the options for securing it have become critical issues for the Trump administration.
The United Nations' top nuclear watchdog, IAEA Director-General Rafael Grossi, told CBS News that Iran still has the technical ability to restart its nuclear program, even though U.S. military strikes dented the program.
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.
Deploying US troops to seize or destroy Iran's highly enriched uranium would bring significant chemical, logistical, and tactical hurdles.
Production marks the first startup of a new nuclear processing capability at a Tennessee complex in over two decades.