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Iran booby traps entrances, collapses tunnels leading to cache of enriched uranium - report

From Jerusalem Post · () English

Summarized and contextualized by DistantNews.

At a glance

News Named sources Ongoing story
  • Iran has reportedly intensified efforts to secure its enriched uranium stockpile by collapsing tunnels and planting explosive mines at entrances.
  • This development comes as the US and Iran are reportedly close to a deal for Iran to relinquish its near-bomb-grade uranium to the US.
  • Former officials expressed concern that Iran might claim some uranium is irretrievable, potentially retaining access, and noted that the US had previously considered a ground operation to retrieve the material.

Iran has escalated efforts to seal off its stockpile of enriched uranium, collapsing tunnels and placing explosive mines at entrances in recent weeks, CNN reported on Saturday, citing five sources familiar with US intelligence.

This comes a day after a senior administration official told reporters that the US and Iran are close to a deal requiring Iran to relinquish its uranium, which has been enriched to near-bomb grade, to the US. Reuters also reported on Friday that the emerging US-Iran deal will include the dismantling of the Iranian nuclear program and allow the US to collect the regime's enriched uranium.

Details of how the uranium will be extracted remain unclear. US President Donald Trump has repeatedly stated that retrieving the uranium is one of the USโ€™s priorities in negotiations, although he has claimed that only the US and possibly China have the capability to do so. A CNN report from Friday stated that the US had originally planned to launch a ground mission into Iran to recover the uranium, but that Trump had paused the operation.

We should have gone and brought the enriched uranium by force in a military operation during the campaign. That would have uprooted the nuclear program from Iran.

โ€” Yoav GallantFormer defense minister Yoav Gallant commenting on the possibility of a joint US-Israel operation to retrieve uranium.

Former defense minister Yoav Gallant said that the US and Israel could and should have combined forces to retrieve the uranium during the war. โ€œWe should have gone and brought the enriched uranium by force in a military operation during the campaign. That would have uprooted the nuclear program from Iran,โ€ he said.

Former head of the National Nuclear Security Administrationโ€™s Office of Nuclear Material Removal, Scott Roecker, expressed concern over reports of heightened fortifications around the uranium. Roecker told CNN that such fortifications could lead to negotiators requiring Iran to bring the uranium to a central location for verification and removal, which would let Iran provide the inventory of the uranium. โ€œIn this scenario, I would worry that Iran would claim that some portion of the HEU was irretrievable. We wouldnโ€™t have full confidence that Iran couldnโ€™t retain access to it at some point in the future,โ€ CNN quoted Roecker as saying.

In this scenario, I would worry that Iran would claim that some portion of the HEU was irretrievable. We wouldnโ€™t have full confidence that Iran couldnโ€™t retain access to it at some point in the future.

โ€” Scott RoeckerFormer head of the National Nuclear Security Administrationโ€™s Office of Nuclear Material Removal, expressing concern over Iran's fortifications.
DistantNews Editorial

Originally published by Jerusalem Post. Summarized and contextualized by our editorial team with added local perspective. Read our editorial standards.