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Israel's best chance at destroying the facility at Fordo could lie with a U.S.-produced bomb that's so heavy that it can only ...
The International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA), the intergovernmental body that assesses compliance with the Nuclear Nonproliferation Treaty, was barred from going within about 40 miles of the affected ...
The Israeli assessment also holds that Iran's stockpiles were spread across Isfahan, Fordo, and Natanz, and had not been ...
The U.S. bombers that attacked Iran's nuclear sites dropped GBU-57 Massive Ordnance Penetrators, bunker-busting bombs designed to destroy hardened underground targets, for the first time in warfare. A ...
Trump confirmed the U.S. used bunker buster bombs to strike Iran’s Fordow site, alongside missile attacks on Natanz and ...
President Donald Trump claims Iran's nuclear sites were "totally obliterated," while Israeli officials report a portion of ...
A 15-ton “bunker buster” bomb was likely needed to destroy the last untouched nuclear facility in Iran, and only the US had one.
The US Air Force says the GBU-57 bunker-buster bomb can penetrate up to 200 feet below ground before exploding.
Bunker buster bombs are not battlefield munitions. They serve a very specific purpose, with potential returns far outpacing the monetary cost.
Bunker buster bombs can go to varying depths depending on the model, from just under 2 feet with the BLU-109 to over 200 feet ...
President Donald Trump is adamant that the U.S. strikes “obliterated” the three Iranian nuclear facilities it targeted last ...
The GBU-57s, or the Massive Ordnance Penetrator (MOP for short), were carried by a fleet of B-2 bombers, marking the first time the munitions were used in combat.