DAY 183.2 | Job's not finished!
No ceasefire until the job is finished!
Two days before American B-2 stealth bombers deployed their payload of explosives on Iranian nuclear facilities, trucks were observed at Fordow, Iran's key nuclear base. Satellite images captured numerous cargo vehicles outside a tunnel entrance to the facility, which is located inside a mountain.
"It is plausible that Iran moved centrifuges and highly enriched uranium to secret or hardened locations prior to the strikes, including to facilities near Pickaxe Mountain."
— Christoph Bluth, professor of international relations and security
While President Donald Trump, backed by the CIA and Israeli intelligence, asserted that Iran's nuclear program was destroyed by the precision strikes, a crucial question remains for the Pentagon: where did centrifuges and highly enriched uranium (HEU) go, as a frantic effort to move them occurred before the US attack?
The “Mount Doom” Theory
One possibility, according to experts, is a secret facility buried even deeper under another mountain 90 miles south of Fordow, known as “Mount Doom.” In Farsi, this potential new ground zero for Iran's nuclear program is called Kuh-e Kolang Gaz La, or “Pickaxe Mountain.” It's located in the Zagros Mountains in central Iran, near Natanz, another Iranian nuclear site.
Christoph Bluth, a professor of international relations and security at the University of Bradford, stated, “It is plausible that Iran moved centrifuges and highly enriched uranium (HEU) to secret or hardened locations prior to the recent strikes — including possibly to facilities near Pickaxe Mountain.” He claimed that previous intelligence indicated “large tunnels being bored into the mountain, with possible infrastructure for an advanced enrichment facility.”
Bluth added that the site “may be buried 100 meters below the surface,” making it conceivable that advanced centrifuge cascades could be hidden there. However, he noted, “there is no specific evidence at this time to confirm where centrifuges and fissile material has been moved to.”
Pickaxe Mountain's Capabilities
Previous satellite images have shown heavy construction at Pickaxe Mountain, and Iran reportedly dismissed the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) when questioned about the activities within the mountain.
Experts suggest that a centrifuge hall built there could potentially be larger than Fordow. The site has four tunnel entrances, each measuring 6.1 meters wide by 7.9 meters high, and analysis of satellite data suggests its tunnels could extend well beyond 116.4 meters deep, making it even further underground than Fordow.
Steven De La Fuente, a research associate at the Institute for Science and International Security in Washington, commented, “It would be much harder to destroy using conventional weapons, such as like a typical bunker buster bomb.”
Movement of Uranium and Intelligence Discrepancies
According to Rafael Grossi, director general of the IAEA, the Iranian regime may have moved approximately 880 pounds (400 kg) of uranium, which was stored in casks the size of scuba tanks and transportable by vehicles.

Satellite imagery captured by Maxar on June 19 showing cargo trucks close to the underground entrance of the Fordow fuel enrichment facility, prior to U.S. airstrikes on the underground complex.
If material from Fordow was indeed moved to Pickaxe Mountain, it would likely have been driven for two hours along Iran's Route 7 freeway.
The emergence of Pickaxe Mountain comes amid a dispute within the Trump administration regarding the impact of the recent strikes on Fordow, Natanz, and Isfahan.
A preliminary US intelligence assessment, prepared by the Defense Intelligence Agency (the Pentagon's main intelligence arm), determined with “low confidence” that Iran's nuclear program was only set back by a matter of months.
This classified assessment, however, contradicts President Trump and other high-ranking US officials who claimed the three sites had been “obliterated.”
— Agencies, June 26, 2025
720p
Source:
Source:
PUPPET REGIME
Disclaimer
No copyright infringement is intended. I do not own nor claim to own the rights to the above content. If you are the rightful owner of material (photos, videos, artwork, product) posted to this non-profit blog and want it removed or credited, please contact me at mynarrowcorner@gmail.com, and your material will be promptly removed or credited.
Job not finished
ReplyDelete👍
Delete