Iran Caught Scrambling at Fordow After Trump’s Devastating Strike — What Are They Hiding?

Just days after President Donald Trump authorized a direct strike on Iran’s Fordow nuclear facility using advanced U.S. bunker buster bombs, new satellite imagery reveals that the Iranian regime is scrambling—raising serious questions about what they might be trying to conceal or recover.

On Sunday, satellite images from Maxar Technologies captured unmistakable signs of renewed activity at the hardened site. A freshly constructed access road, heavy construction machinery, and multiple vehicles were spotted near the facility. This comes just over a week after the June 21 strike that was hailed by military analysts as a strategic blow to Iran’s nuclear ambitions.

According to the BBC, the satellite photos appear to indicate that Iran is conducting “some work under way at the Fordow facility where the Iranian government has been enriching uranium.” Nuclear weapons expert David Albright suggested the regime may be backfilling bomb craters, assessing structural damage, and conducting radiological tests—possibly to gauge the extent of the U.S. damage.

While some left-leaning outlets have attempted to cast doubt on the mission’s success—citing a leaked preliminary intelligence report that predicted only a temporary setback—President Trump’s Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth isn’t having it.

“Anyone with two eyes can see the immense damage that Fordow had sustained,” Hegseth told reporters in a fiery statement, adding, “If you want to know what’s going on at Fordow, you better go there and get a big shovel because no one’s under there right now.”

Hegseth wasn’t alone in his assessment. He pointed to statements from CIA Director John Ratcliffe, DNI Tulsi Gabbard, and even Israel’s top defense officials who affirmed the mission’s significant success. In fact, Iran’s own foreign ministry reluctantly admitted that “our nuclear installations have been badly damaged, that’s for sure.”

But the media continues to latch onto conflicting voices. In an interview with CBS News, International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) Director General Rafael Grossi disclosed that Iran may have anticipated the attack, and moved some enriched uranium before the bunker busters hit.

Grossi conceded that the strike disrupted Iran’s nuclear efforts, but warned that Tehran could rebuild spinning centrifuges and resume uranium enrichment within months. “Frankly speaking,” he admitted, “one cannot claim that everything has disappeared and there is nothing there.”

While globalists and their media allies continue to spin, one thing is clear: President Trump’s decisive action forced Iran’s hand—and now, under the rubble at Fordow, the regime is desperately trying to figure out its next move.

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