Fresh satellite images show continuous activity on the Iranian Ford nuclear site

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Recent satellite imagery has revealed continuous activity and new evidence of significant damage to tunnels and road access to the Iranium Uranium enrichment site caused by last week’s air strikes.
The installation was targeted by Israeli forces on June 23, one day after the United States made strikes using bunker-business bombs.
The new high-resolution satellite imagery, collected by Maxar Technologies, shows an excavator and several staff members positioned immediately next to the North tree on the ridge above the underground complex.
The crane also seems to operate at the entrance to the tree, where several additional vehicles are seen under the ridge, parked along the access path which has been built to access the site.
The American strikes return to Iran’s nuclear program in return “many years”, reveals the Israeli evaluation

This satellite image of June 29, 2025, provided by Maxar Technologies, shows damage to the enrichment of the Fordows in Iran after the American strikes. (Satellite image © 2025 Maxar Technologies)
Maxar photos also reveal the complete destruction of an installation north of the site, surrounded by more craters and dispersed dust. Another crater and visible burns are visible on a Western access route.
Analysts believe that the main objective of the strikes was to hinder access to the sites and complicate repair efforts.
American air strikes leave a brand on Iranian nuclear sites, reveal the Maxar satellite images

Maxar Technologies imagery taken on June 29, 2025, captures the consequences of the United States and Israeli strikes on the Iranian installation of Ford-Uranium, revealing damaged tunnels and current repair operations. (Satellite image © 2025 Maxar Technologies)
The United States and Israel said that these military actions aimed to hinder Iran’s ability to develop a nuclear weapon. Iran rejected these accusations, arguing that its nuclear program is entirely peaceful.
The Ford site, which is buried in a mountain near Qom, about 60 miles southwest of Tehran, was bombed by the United States on June 22, causing six eminent craters and a notable propagation of gray debris, according to satellite photos.
The Ford-Ford nuclear site of Iran hit the second time while IDF targets access routes

New high-resolution photos taken on June 29, 2025, show significant damage to the Iran Ford-Fordow nuclear site after the recent Israeli and American air strikes, with visible destruction of tunnels and access roads. (Satellite image © 2025 Maxar Technologies)
The next day, Israel confirmed that he had made a second strike on Fordow, specifically targeting the roads leading to the installation. Iranian officials later recognized this attack.
General Dan Caine, president of the joint staff chiefs, told journalists during a pentagon briefing last Sunday that the three Iranian nuclear sites were targeting in the strike “damage and extremely serious destruction”, “the total damage would take time to assess.
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The latest strike on Fordow comes when Israeli defense forces said that Israel had also launched a series of strikes aimed at the notorious of Evin prison and several Iranian military command centers in a “continuous effort to degrade the military capacities of the Iranian regime”.
Stephen Sorace and Yonat from Fox News contributed to this report.
Stepheny Price is a writer for Fox News Digital and Fox Business. It covers subjects, including missing people, homicides, cases of national crime, illegal immigration, etc. History advice and ideas can be sent to [email protected]