
The aftermath of Operation Midnight Hammer, a strike by the United States Air Force on three nuclear facilities in Iran authorised by President Donald Trump on June 22, was raucous and triumphant. But that depended on what company you were keeping.
The the bombing of the Fordow Fuel Enrichment Plant, the uranium-enrichment facility at Natanz, and the uranium-conversion facility in Isfahan. The Israeli Air Force had already attacked the last two facilities, sparing Fordow for the singular weaponry available for the USAF.
The Fordow site was of particular interest, located some eighty to a hundred metres underground and cocooned by protective concrete. For its purported destruction, B-2 Spirit stealth bombers were used to drop GBU-57 Massive Ordnance Penetrator 鈥渂unker buster鈥 bombs. All in all, approximately 75 precision guided weapons were used in the operation, along with 125 aircraft and a guided missile submarine.
Trump was never going to be anything other than optimistic about the result. 鈥淢onumental Damage was done to all Nuclear sites in Iran, as shown by satellite images,鈥 he . 鈥淥bliteration is an accurate term!鈥
At the Pentagon following the attack, Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth bubbled with enthusiasm. 鈥淭he order we received from our commander in chief was focused, it was powerful, and it was clear. We devastated the Iranian nuclear program.鈥
The Chair of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, Air Force General Dan Caine, was confident that the facilities had been subjected to severe punishment. 鈥淚nitial battle damage assessments indicate that all three sites sustained extremely severe damage and destruction.鈥 Adding to Caine鈥檚 remarks, Hegseth that, 鈥淭he battle damage assessment is ongoing, but our initial assessment, as the Chairman said, is that all of our precision munitions struck where we wanted them to strike and had the desired effect.鈥
Resort to satellite imagery was always going to take place, and Maxar Technologies willingly supplied the material. 鈥淎 layer of grey-blue ash caused by the airstrikes [on Fordow] is seen across a large swathe of the area,鈥 the company in a statement. 鈥淎dditionally, several of the tunnel entrances that lead into the underground facility are blocked with dirt following the airstrikes.鈥
The director of the Central Intelligence Agency, John Ratcliffe, also to the merry chorus that the damage had been significant. 鈥淐IA can confirm that a body of credible intelligence indicates Iran鈥檚 Nuclear Program has been severely damaged by the recent, targeted airstrikes.鈥 The assessment included 鈥渘ew intelligence from a historically reliable and accurate source/method that several key Iranian nuclear facilities were destroyed and would have to be rebuilt over the course of years.鈥
Israeli sources were also quick to stroke Trump鈥檚 already outsized ego. The Israel Atomic Energy Commission that the strikes, combined with Israel鈥檚 own efforts, had 鈥渟et back Iran鈥檚 ability to develop nuclear weapons by many years.鈥 Israel Defense Forces Chief of Staff Lieutenant General Eyal Zamir鈥檚 was that the damage to the nuclear program was sufficient to have 鈥渟et it back by years, I repeat, years鈥.
The chief of the increasingly discredited International Atomic Energy Agency, Rafael Grossi, flirted with some initial speculation, but was mindful of necessary caveats. In a to an emergency meeting of the IAEA鈥檚 35-nation Board of Governors, he warned that, 鈥淎t this time, no one, including the IAEA, is in a position to have fully assessed the underground damage at Fordow.鈥 Cue the speculation: 鈥淕iven the explosive payload utilised and extreme(ly) vibration-sensitive nature of centrifuges, very significant damage is expected to have occurred.鈥
This was a parade begging to be rained on. CNN and The New York Times supplied it. Referring to preliminary classified findings in a Defense Intelligence Agency (DIA) assessment running for five pages, the paper that the bombing of the three sites had 鈥渟et back the country鈥檚 nuclear program by only a few months鈥. The entrances to two of the facilities had been sealed off by the strikes but were not successful in precipitating a collapse of the underground buildings. Sceptical expertise murmured through the report: to destroy the facility at Fordow would require 鈥渨aves of airstrikes, with days or even weeks of pounding the same spots鈥.
Then came the issue of the nuclear material in question, which Iran still retained control over. The fate of more than 400 kilograms of uranium that had been enriched up to 60% of purity is unclear, as are the number of surviving or hidden centrifuges.
Iran had already informed the IAEA on June 13 that 鈥渟pecial measures鈥 would be taken to protect nuclear materials and equipment under IAEA safeguards, a feature provided under the Non-Proliferation Treaty. Any transfer of nuclear material from a safeguarded facility to another location, however, would have to be declared to the agency, something bound to be increasingly unlikely given the proposed suspension of cooperation with the IAEA by Iran鈥檚 parliament.
After mulling over the attacks over the course of a week, Grossi 聽the matter. The attacks on the facilities had caused severe though 鈥渘ot total鈥 damage.
鈥淔rankly speaking, one cannot claim that everything has disappeared and there is nothing there.鈥 Tehran could 鈥渋n a matter of months鈥 have 鈥渁 few cascades of centrifuges spinning and producing enriched uranium.鈥 Iran still had the 鈥渋ndustrial and technological鈥 means to recommence the process.
Efforts to question the effacing thoroughness of Operation Midnight Hammer did not sit well with the Trump administration. White House spokeswoman Karoline Leavitt worked herself into a state on any cautionary reporting, treating it as a libellous blemish. 鈥淭he leaking of this alleged report is a clear attempt to demean President Trump and discredit the brave fighter pilots who conducted a perfectly executed mission to obliterate Iran鈥檚 nuclear program,鈥 she in a statement.
鈥淓veryone knows what happens when you drop 14 30,000-pound bombs perfectly on their targets.鈥
Hegseth similarly raged against the importance placed on the DIA report. In a press conference on June 26, he the tendency of the press corps to 鈥渃heer against Trump so hard, it鈥檚 like in your DNA and in your blood鈥. The scribblers had to 鈥渃heer against the efficacy of these strikes鈥 with 鈥渉alf-truths, spun information, leaked information鈥.
Trump, for his part, returned to familiar ground, attacking any questioning narrative as 鈥淔ake News鈥. CNN, he seethed, had some of the dumbest anchors in the business. With malicious glee, he of rumours that reporters from both CNN and the NYT were going to be sacked for making up those 鈥淔AKE stories on the Iran Nuclear sites because they got it so wrong.鈥
A postmodern nonsense has descended on the damage assessments regarding Iran鈥檚 nuclear program, leaving the way clear for over remunerated soothsayers. But there was nothing postmodern in the incalculable damage done to the law of nations, a body of acknowledged rules rendered brittle and breakable before the rapacious legislators of the jungle.
[Dr Binoy Kampmark lectures at RMIT University.]