NEED TO KNOW
- Israel struck Khondab heavy water plant, Ardakan yellowcake facility, and Bushehr reactor Friday
- IAEA confirms heavy water plant “no longer operational”; no declared nuclear material at site
- Israel threatens to “escalate and expand” campaign as Trump extends Hormuz deadline to April 6
TEHRAN (TDR) — Israel launched coordinated strikes on three Iranian nuclear facilities Friday, targeting the Khondab heavy water plant, the Ardakan yellowcake production facility, and the Bushehr nuclear power plant—the most expansive attack on Iran’s nuclear infrastructure since the war began February 28.
The big picture: The strikes represent a deliberate escalation beyond military targets to nuclear infrastructure that could support weapons production, even as the IAEA confirms no radiation leaks and Iran retaliates by wounding U.S. troops at a Saudi airbase.
- Over 50 Israeli fighter jets struck the facilities simultaneously in “Operation Rising Lion,” including the only yellowcake plant in Iran used for uranium processing
- The IAEA has repeatedly warned that armed attacks on nuclear facilities “should never take place” and risk radioactive releases
- Israel also hit steel plants in Isfahan and Ahvaz—partially owned by the IRGC—and a chemical weapons research facility in Parchin
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Why it matters: Heavy water and yellowcake represent alternative pathways to nuclear weapons outside uranium enrichment; destroying them degrades Iran’s long-term nuclear options while raising the stakes for accidental radiation releases or Iranian retaliation against regional nuclear facilities.
- Heavy water cools reactors that can produce plutonium; the Arak reactor was originally designed for weapons-grade plutonium production before being defanged under the 2015 nuclear deal
- Yellowcake is the raw material for uranium enrichment; the Ardakan facility is Iran’s only such processing plant
- The strikes bring total war deaths to over 1,340, including Iran’s Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei
Driving the news: The attack came hours after Defense Minister Israel Katz warned strikes would “escalate and expand,” and just days after Trump extended his deadline for Iran to reopen the Strait of Hormuz to April 6.
- Iran retaliated Friday by striking Prince Sultan Air Base in Saudi Arabia, wounding at least 10 U.S. service members and damaging refueling aircraft critical to the bombing campaign
- The IAEA confirmed the Khondab facility “has sustained severe damage and is no longer operational” based on satellite imagery analysis
- Israel claimed the heavy water plant was a “significant economic asset” generating tens of millions for Iran’s atomic energy program
What they’re saying: The gap between military claims and technical assessments highlights the risk calculus—Israel emphasizes weapons potential while international agencies stress the danger of striking nuclear facilities regardless of content.
- Defense Minister Israel Katz — “Iran will pay heavy, increasing prices for this war crime… attacks in Iran will escalate and expand to additional targets and areas that assist the regime in building and operating weapons”
- IAEA — “Based on independent analysis of satellite imagery… the heavy water production plant at Khondab… has sustained severe damage and is no longer operational. The installation contains no declared nuclear material”
- Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi — “Iran will exact HEAVY price for Israeli crimes”
Yes, but: The Arak reactor associated with the heavy water plant had its core removed and filled with concrete under the 2015 JCPOA, meaning its weapons potential was already degraded before the strike.
- Heavy water has civilian applications including medical isotope production, which was the stated purpose of the converted Arak reactor
- The facility was hit nine months ago during the June 2025 war and was being rebuilt; Friday’s strike completes its destruction
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Between the lines: Israel’s expansion to nuclear infrastructure—rather than purely military targets—suggests a strategy to permanently degrade Iran’s nuclear capacity before any negotiated settlement, making the facilities unusable regardless of who controls Tehran.
- The timing, just before Trump’s April 6 deadline for Hormuz, may be intended to force Iran to negotiate from maximum weakness or face complete nuclear infrastructure destruction
- Striking the only yellowcake plant and main heavy water facility eliminates raw material processing capabilities that would take years to rebuild
What’s next:
- Trump has extended the deadline for Iran to reopen the Strait of Hormuz to April 6, threatening strikes on Iranian energy infrastructure if the waterway remains closed
- The IAEA continues monitoring Natanz, Esfahan, and Fordow for potential strikes as the war enters its second month
- Iran’s Revolutionary Guard warned employees of companies with American shareholders to evacuate, threatening industrial targets across the region
If attacking nuclear facilities—even those without declared nuclear material—risks radioactive releases and regional escalation, does degrading Iran’s long-term nuclear capacity justify the immediate dangers to civilians and the precedent of striking nuclear infrastructure?
Sources
This report was compiled using information from The Jerusalem Post, Interesting Engineering, CBC News, PBS NewsHour, ICAN, and Alma Research.
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