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Amid competing assessments of how badly the enrichment facility was damaged in U.S. strikes, Iran appears to be making its own inspection.
The Pentagon will stop making data from three satellites publicly available by the end of July. Scientists were initially given less than a week to prepare for the loss of the data.
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The Western Journal on MSNNew Satellite Imagery Shows Iran Is Up to Something at FordowFresh activity was spotted over the weekend at the Fordow nuclear facility in Iran that was hit by U.S. bunker buster bombs on June 21, suggesting that the rogue regime was up to something.
The development of the Don-2N was a significant engineering feat, requiring advanced materials, precise manufacturing, and ...
A new satellite image showed a buildup of U.S. Air Force assets at Diego Garcia, a strategic American base in the Indian ...
New Maxar satellite images, taken on June 29, show cranes and people working at the Fordow enrichment complex following US and Israeli air strikes. Vehicles can also seen below a ridge and are parked ...
21h
Study Finds on MSNNew Orleans’ $15 Billion Levees Are Sinking Up To 7 Times Faster Than Sea Levels RiseIn a nutshell New Orleans’ $15 billion flood protection system is sinking up to 28 millimeters per year—nearly 10 times ...
The Defense Department will still maintain the Defense Meteorological Satellite program, but announced last week it would cease sharing the imagery with NOAA and NASA. The decision, which was ...
New satellite evidence shows excavators and personnel repairing Iran's Fordow uranium facility after airstrikes by Israel and the U.S. damaged tunnels and access roads.
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