Iranians wave national flags and chant slogans as they celebrate a ceasefire between Iran and Israel at Enghlab Square in the capital Tehran on June 24, 2025. A fragile ceasefire in the Iran-Israel war appeared to be holding on June 24, after 12 days of strikes that saw Israel and the United States pummel the Islamic republic's nuclear facilities. Photograph courtesy of ATTA KENARE / AFP
WORLD

After U.S. strikes, Iran restarting nuke program

Agence France-Presse

Iran’s government said Tuesday it had “taken the necessary measures” to ensure the continuation of its nuclear program after US and Israeli strikes targeted its facilities.

“We have taken the necessary measures and are taking stock of the damage” caused by the strikes, said the head of the Atomic Energy Organization of Iran, Mohammad Eslami, in a statement aired on state television.

“Plans for restarting (the facilities) have been prepared in advance, and our strategy is to ensure that production and services are not disrupted,” he added.

The United States struck the Fordow, Isfahan and Natanz uranium enrichment facilities on Sunday.

US President Donald Trump called the strikes a “spectacular military success,” although the extent of the damage is unknown.

An adviser to Iran’s supreme leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, said the country still had stocks of enriched uranium and that “the game is not over.”

Israel announced on Monday that it had again bombed the Fordow site, buried under a mountain south of Tehran, to “obstruct access routes.”