Iran's enriched uranium goes dark to inspectors after the war
Eight months on, the IAEA still cannot verify 440 kg of 60% HEU stored at Isfahan; Tehran says it has not resumed enrichment
Summary
Eight months after the June 2025 strikes, Iran's nuclear program is a Proliferation black box. The IAEA withdrew inspectors in June 2025 and still cannot verify the ~440.9 kg of 60% HEU and ~184 kg of 20% material Tehran had accumulated — most believed stored in an underground tunnel complex at Isfahan. The agency calls the prolonged lack of access "a matter of proliferation concern." Tehran says it has not resumed enrichment — DNI Gabbard echoed that on 18 March 2026, and Iran's IAEA envoy repeated it on 2 April. Technical bodies (ISIS, Arms Control Association) judge the strikes set Iran back: a first weapon would now take more than a year versus months before, with new uncertainties — but the HEU was neither destroyed nor verifiably secured. The standoff frames the post-ceasefire diplomacy.
By the numbers
- ~440.9 kg — Iran's 60% HEU as of mid-June 2025 (IAEA).
- ~184 kg — 20%-enriched UF6 also unverified.
- 8 months — since IAEA inspectors lost access.
- months → 1+ year — first-weapon timeline before vs after the strikes.
Why it matters
Unverified bomb-grade-adjacent material in a state that has lost trust in the inspection regime is the core proliferation risk of the post-war Middle East. It drives Saudi hedging and keeps an Israeli or US re-strike on the table if Iran is judged to be reconstituting.
What to watch
- Whether Iran readmits IAEA inspectors to Isfahan/Fordow/Natanz.
- Any intelligence of resumed enrichment or weaponization work.
- Diplomatic moves to bargain over the HEU stockpile.