Photo the first satellite images with the effects of the Fortow strokes. American bombs have produced grounds of land


The site from Fortow, after the US Photo Bombardment: AFP / AFP / Profimedia
The first satellite images captured from the fortow, where are the most important nuclear installations of Iran, shows major damage, compared to the photos taken in 2009, when the site was still under construction, says Open Source Center, an organization in the UK that makes security analyzes based on information obtained from open sources.
Open Source Center has published, on the X account, a series of images that suggest the dimensions of the destruction caused by the American bombing on the Fortow installations.
A first image is a collage of a photo taken in 2009 with one taken immediately after bombing. In the place where previously they seemed to be constructions and tunnels now are craters of proportions

It seems that one of the bombs was launched on a tunnel whose entrance gate was on a slope of the Fortow peak. On the plateau it seems that the earth would have been surprised as a result of the attack.

Open Source Center made a possible topographic model of the Fortow site, from another angle, the one above the plateau in which the tunnel network would have been. The model suggests that the bombs would have hit the entrances on a slope and on the peaks, and the explosion would have amplified in the network of tunnels that descend to the entrances on the opposite side.

The US hit three nuclear sites in Iran, including Fortow, Natanz and Isfahan, announced on Saturday night, at 4 o'clock, President Donald Trump. Trump described the US military blows on Iranian nuclear installations as a “spectacular military success” and added that the sites were “completely and totally destroyed” in a speech from the White House, Sunday morning. Trump warned Iran that the US could attack additional targets if Iran doesn't make peace.
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General Dan Caine said that the flight of B-2 bombers to a Pacific base was meant to hijack the attention of the Iranians, while the bombers involved flew directly from the base from Missouri to the east, with Iran as a final destination.
The seven bombers, each with two people on board, flew for 18 hours being releasing in flight several times. Only dozens of planes were involved in the refueling process. Communications were used as little as possible to ensure the success of the action. The first bombardier launched the anti-buncar bombs on 02.10, Iran Hour, at the Fortow, followed by the launch of the loads of the other aircraft, both at the Fortow and at Natanz.




