Iran, uranium and Witkoff
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The Isfahan facility, suspected of storing a cache of enriched uranium, was smashed during the 12-day campaign last June.
President Trump is pressuring Iran to either curtail its nuclear program or face military strikes, after Iran amassed a large stockpile of highly enriched uranium. Here's what to know.
The UN nuclear watchdog says it has no evidence that Iran is developing a nuclear weapon, though it remains concerned about enriched uranium stockpiles and limited inspector access.
Iran’s nuclear ambassador alleges that US-Israeli airstrikes targeted the Natanz enrichment facility
Iran’s IAEA ambassador says U.S. and Israeli airstrikes hit Iran’s Natanz enrichment site, but the U.N. nuclear watchdog says it has no reports of damage.
When PolitiFact asked the White House to square Trump’s remarks about obliteration with Witkoff’s comment about Iran being a week away from having bomb making material, the White House referred us to press secretary Karoline Leavitt’s Feb. 24 remarks.
President Donald Trump's special envoy Steve Witkoff revealed in an interview this week that Iranian negotiators told him in the lead-up to the U.S.-Israeli military operation in Iran that they had enough enriched uranium to "make 11 nuclear bombs.
In discussing his reasoning for launching U.S. airstrikes on Iran, President Donald Trump said, "An Iranian regime armed with long-range missiles and nuclear weapons would be a dire threat to every American.