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Operation ‘Midnight Hammer’: 5 key takeaways from the Pentagon briefing on US bombing Iran

Midnight Hammer: The US strike targeted three of Iran’s most sensitive nuclear facilities — Fordow, Natanz, and Isfahan.

Operation 'Midnight Hammer': 5 key takeaways from the Pentagon briefing on US bombing IranDefense Secretary Pete Hegseth calls on reporters for questions during a news conference at the Pentagon in Washington. (AP Photo)

Senior Pentagon officials on Sunday gave a media briefing on ‘Operation Midnight Hammer’, the codename given to the US’s precision strikes on three of Iran’s nuclear facilities hours earlier, which marked a dramatic escalation in the Middle East and plunged US-Iran relations to their lowest point since the Iranian Revolution.

US Secretary of Defence Pete Hegseth and Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff Dan Caine on Sunday reaffirmed Washington’s stance on Tehran’s nuclear programme and revealed new details on the covert operation — which was conducted well before the two-week self-imposed deadline set by Trump.

The covert operation involved over 125 aircraft and deception tactics, and the fleet included seven B-2 stealth bombers, the press briefing revealed.

1. The targets: Iran’s key nuclear sites hit

The US strike targeted three of Iran’s most sensitive nuclear facilities — Fordow, Natanz, and Isfahan. Natanz, Tehran’s primary enrichment site, reportedly housed 13,500 operational centrifuges, capable of purifying uranium to 5 per cent, and over 160 advanced centrifuges capable of purifying uranium up to 60 per cent — a small step away from 90 per cent (weapons-grade purity). The Isfahan facility housed three Chinese-built research reactors. It also included the Uranium Conversion Facility, which converts ‘yellowcake’ uranium to uranium hexafluoride (the raw input for centrifuges).

The Fordow enrichment site housed 2,000 operational centrifuges. What sets this site apart from the other facilities damaged in Israeli barrages since June 13 is its depth: built into the side of a mountain and buried approximately 260 to 300 feet underground, it is effectively impervious to conventional air strikes. Amid the Israeli bombardment, the Fordow nuclear facility stood unscathed. This site required the direct involvement of the US, which houses the GBU-57 Massive Ordnance Penetrators (MOP) in its arsenal – a 30,000-pound “bunker buster” capable of destroying it.

The Pentagon said these strikes were conducted to “severely degrade Iran’s nuclear programme.”

2. The Strike Package: B-2 Bombers, Tomahawks, and Bunker Busters

The covert op featured seven B-2 Spirit bombers – with two crew members in each – flying from Missouri, backed by over 125 aircraft, including 4th and 5th-generation fighter jets (as decoys), surveillance planes, and aerial refuelers. The B-2s dropped 14 Massive Ordnance Penetrators (GBU-57s) on Natanz and Fordow, while a US guided missile submarine launched more than 24 Tomahawk missiles at Isfahan in a coordinated strike.

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3. The Execution: Longest B-2 mission since 2001

The mission was conducted within a timeframe of 18 hours and involved multiple in-flight refuellings and deception tactics such as decoys and airspace clearing. All three nuclear facilities were struck between 6:40 pm and 7:05 pm (Eastern Time), with the Tomahawks delivering the final blow at Isfahan.

4. Secrecy and a multi-layered assault

The White House maintained complete secrecy in what marked the longest B-2 mission since 2001 and the first operational employment of the GBU-57. Describing the operation as “highly classified”, Caine said that very few people in Washington were aware of the “timing and nature” of the plan. Iran’s air defences failed to respond, and no US aircraft were fired upon. Caine concluded that the US was able to retain the element of surprise.

5. The message: ‘American deterrence is back’

Hegseth described the strikes as “bold and brilliant,” claiming they demonstrated that “American deterrence is back” and reaffirmed Washington’s stance on the enrichment programme — that “Iran cannot have a nuclear weapon.” He added that the sites were “obliterated” and warned Tehran against retaliation.

He further called the operation a “spectacular success,” highlighting that no Iranian troops or civilians were targeted.

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“As President Trump has stated, ‘the US does not seek war’, but… we will act swiftly and decisively when our people, our partners, or our interests are threatened,” Hegseth said, to pressure Tehran to come to the negotiation table.

What’s next?

Following the attack, President Trump gave a press briefing from Washington, reiterating his previous calls that “Iran cannot have a nuclear weapon.” He warned Tehran against carrying out retaliatory attacks, saying that “there will either be peace or tragedy for Iran, far greater than what we have witnessed over the last eight days.”

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu hailed Washington’s move and, in a video message addressed to the US President, said, “Your bold decision to target Iran’s nuclear facilities, with the awesome and righteous might of the United States, will change history.”

Iran’s Supreme Leader of Iran, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, said, “The US entering the war is 100% to its own detriment.”

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Later in the day, Iran’s Parliament approved plans to close the Strait of Hormuz, a vital waterway between the Gulf of Persia and the Gulf of Oman, responsible for 20 per cent of global oil trade. The Supreme National Security Council, the highest security body in the state apparatus, is yet to take the final call, Major General Kowsari, a member of the National Security Committee, said.

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