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US deploys B-2 bombers capable of striking Iran’s Fordow nuclear site: Report

The bombers apparently refueled after launching from Missouri, suggesting they launched without full fuel tanks due to a heavy onboard payload, which could be bunker-buster bombs,� according to Fox News

Khaled Yousef, Ikram Kouachi  | 21.06.2025 - Update : 21.06.2025
US deploys B-2 bombers capable of striking Iran’s Fordow nuclear site: Report

ISTANBUL 

The US has moved six B-2 stealth bombers toward Guam, a Micronesian island in the Western Pacific, the US Fox News broadcaster reported Saturday, citing flight tracking data and voice communications with air traffic control.

“The bombers apparently refueled after launching from Missouri, suggesting they launched without full fuel tanks due to a heavy onboard payload, which could be bunker-buster bombs,” the channel claimed.

"Destroying (Fordo) from the air is a job only the U.S. can do." Fox News Digital quoted Foundation for Defense of Democracies CEO Mark Dubowitz as saying.

Moreover, Jonathan Ruhe, director of Foreign Policy for the Jewish Institute for National Security of America (JINSA), said the bunker busters are designed to use the force of gravity to "penetrate through any mixture of earth, rock, and concrete before the bomb itself then explodes" underground.

The explosion that ensues could take out the target fully or "collapse the structure" around the target "without necessarily obliterating it," Ruhe explained, according to Fox News.

The Wall Street Journal also reported that the B-2s can carry the GBU-57 bunker buster, a 30,000-pound conventional weapon that analysts say has the best chance of damaging Fordo.

The same report claimed the Pentagon’s move indicates the Trump administration is positioning assets in case they are needed for a strike.

"Officials said there had been no order given to ready a B-2 strike. The flights could also help pressure Iran amid efforts to resolve the standoff diplomatically," it said.

The report said Trump had earlier approved attack plans for Iran but was waiting to see if Tehran would stop its nuclear activities.

Earlier, the Israeli daily Haaretz cited a senior Israeli military official as saying that Fordo, located in a tunnel beneath a mountain near the city of Qom, is one of the facilities already designated as a target.

“If we are given the order to strike, we will act,” the unnamed source said.

The bombers departed from Whiteman Air Force Base in the US state of Missouri and are headed west toward the strategic US base in Guam—a US island territory in Micronesia in the Western Pacific—accompanied by four refueling aircraft, Haaretz said.

It remains unclear whether they will continue to Diego Garcia, a key US base located roughly 3,500 kilometers (2,174 miles) from Iran, it added.

Fordo is considered one of Iran’s most secure nuclear sites, lying around 80-90 meters (262-295 feet) underground. Due to the depth and engineering complexity of the facility, military experts have long debated whether it could be completely destroyed, even by the US' largest conventional bombs.

Haaretz described three potential scenarios that have been discussed regarding a strike on Fordo.

One would involve a direct American airstrike using a massive bomb such as the MOAB, or Massive Ordnance Air Blast, which weighs around 13 to 14 tons and is released from strategic bombers.

Another possibility would be an Israeli operation using US-supplied aircraft, though this option is currently viewed as unlikely.

A third scenario would see the Israeli Air Force conducting a unilateral strike using all available aerial assets, including stealth fighters and long-range aircraft.

The newspaper claimed that such discussions have become more urgent in recent days.

On Wednesday, the Israeli daily Maariv reported that Israeli officials are preparing for a possible attack on Fordo without necessarily waiting for Washington’s green light.

Hostilities broke out on June 13 when Israel launched airstrikes on several sites across Iran, including military and nuclear facilities, prompting Tehran to launch retaliatory strikes.

Israeli authorities said at least 25 people have been killed and hundreds injured since then in Iranian missile attacks.

Meanwhile, in Iran, 430 people have been killed and more than 3,500 wounded in the Israeli assault, according to the Iranian Health Ministry.


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