When Trump pulled out of the international nuclear agreement with Tehran in 2018, Iran lacked even a single bomb's worth [View all]
When Trump pulled out of the international nuclear agreement with Tehran in 2018, Iran lacked even a single bomb's worth of uranium. Since then, it accumulated 22,000 pounds of enriched uranium. www.nytimes.com/interactive/...
— Peter Baker (@peterbakernyt.bsky.social) 2026-05-01T13:01:43.063Z
Since eight years ago when President Trump pulled out of a nuclear deal with Tehran, Iran has accumulated 22,000 pounds, or 11 tons, of enriched uranium. But the fate of Irans stockpile remains a mystery, two months after the United States began a war meant to prevent Iran from ever building an atomic bomb.
Uranium can light cities or destroy them. Low concentrations can power nuclear reactors. Higher concentrations, from a process called enrichment, can make nuclear bombs.
Uranium enrichment gets increasingly easy and fast as concentrations rise. Its much harder to get to 20 percent from 0 percent than to 60 percent from 20 percent, or even to 90 percent the preferred level for making nuclear arms.
In June 2025, during the 12-day war, the United States bombed Irans enrichment plants at Natanz and Fordow, as well as its uranium storage tunnels at Isfahan. One month later, Iran suspended cooperation with the I.A.E.A., ending the monitoring of the nations enrichment sites.
https://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2026/04/29/science/iran-enriched-uranium-stockpile-nuclear-energy-bomb.html?smid=nytcore-ios-share