B-2 furtive bombers perhaps bringing bunker-bunker seem to go to Guam

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Six B-2 furtive b-2 bombers of Whiteman Air Force Base in the Missouri seem to be on the way to an American air base in Guam, according to flight tracking data and vocal communications with air traffic control.
The bombers have apparently reflected after the launch from the Missouri, suggesting that they launched without a complete fuel tanks due to an integrated payload, which could be bunker bombs.
The B-2 can carry a bunker-bunter bomb of two tonnes-something that only the United States has-which, according to experts, could be essential to target the most strongly fortified nuclear site in Iran: Fordow.

How a Bunker Buster GBU-57 works. (Fox News)
How the Bunker Buster bombs work and how they could destroy the Ford-ir nuclear site
Mark Dubowitz, CEO of the Foundation for Defense of Democracies, told Fox News Digital that “destroying (Fordow) of the air is work that only the United States can do”.
According to Jonathan Ruhe, director of Jinsa’s foreign policy, the bunker-buses are designed to use the force of gravity to “penetrate through any mixture of earth, rock and concrete before the bomb itself explodes” underground. The ensuing explosion could completely eliminate the target or “collapse the structure” around the target “without necessarily erasing it”, he explained.

US Air Force B-2 Spirit Stealth Bomber (C) was flanked by 4 navy fighters F-35 Marine F-35 during an overview of military aircraft on the Hudson river and the New York port after York, and New Jersey on July 4, 2020. (Reuters / Mike Segar)
American troops in the Middle East could face increased threats in the middle of the Iranian conflict: “irreparable damage”
President Donald Trump, who said he would make a decision on the United States’s participation in the Israeli-Iranian conflict, is expected to return to the White House on Saturday afternoon. The president is expected to receive intelligence briefings from the National Security Council on Saturday and Sunday while he considers possible actions against Iran.
Recently, the president seemed to be disagreeing publicly with the national intelligence director Tulsi Gabbard, declaring that she was “wrong” when she declared in March that there is “no evidence” that Iran built a nuclear weapon. Gabbard later responded to the apparent controversy, saying that “the dishonest media intentionally emerge my testimony from its context and disseminate false news as a means of making division”.
“America has the intelligence that Iran is to the point that it can produce a nuclear weapon within months, if they decide to finalize the assembly. President Trump has been clear that this cannot happen, and I agree,” added Gabbard in his article on X.

The Barricade band secures the site, where the crews work, around a building that was damaged during an Iran attack by Iran against Israel, in the middle of the Iran-Israel conflict, in Beit Shean, in the Jordan Valley, on June 21, 2025. (Reuters / Ammar Awad)
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While the United States has not taken direct measures in the conflict, the State Department Friday Announced sanctions on Tehran Despite the Secretary of State, Marco Rubio, initially put the distance between Jerusalem and Iran. The sanctions were imposed on the eight entities and an individual “for their involvement in purchases and the shipment of machines sensitive to proliferation from China for the Iranian defense industry”.