Iran’s foreign minister: US strikes ‘destroyed’ nuclear facilities

Video Player is loading.
Current Time 0:15
Duration 1:00
Loaded: 100.00%
Stream Type LIVE
 
1x
The Hill's Headlines | PM- July 22, 2025
The Hill's Headlines — July 21, 2025
‘Stupidest Initiative’ Yet: Pelosi Slams Trump’s Possible Plan To Reopen Alcatraz
Trump DOJ FIRES Epstein Prosecutor Maurene Comey, Daughter Of FBI Dir. James Comey | TRENDING
Trump Undergoes Medical Exam For Swelling In Legs, Hand Bruising | TRENDING
PBS In TROUBLE: What All Is Included In The Senate's $9B Recissions Package? | TRENDING
Running For Governor: Rep. John James (R-MI) | Hill Nation Summit
'Not Ready For Powell To Be Fired' Says GOP Rep | TRENDING
Bernie Sanders Sings Praises As Mamdani Lays Out Ways To 'Unite The Party' | TRENDING
Klobuchar Hopes Trump Changes Economy For The Better Instead Of 'PISSING OFF' Americans | TRENDING
Kristi Noem Floats BIG CHANGES To Airport Security Screening | TRENDING

Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi said during a recent interview that the U.S.’s strikes last month “destroyed” Tehran’s nuclear facilities and that the country will not refrain from continuing to enrich uranium. 

“It is stopped because, yes, damages are serious and severe. But obviously we cannot give up [on] enrichment because it is an achievement of our own scientists. And now, more than that, it is a question of national pride,” Araghchi told Fox News’s Bret Baier.

Araghchi later added that the “facilities have been destroyed.” 

Iran’s foreign minister, in an interview on “Special Report with Bret Baier,” said Iran will be able to rebuild the facilities, insisting that Tehran would not pause enriching uranium. 

“If the goal is to make sure that Iran will never have nuclear weapons, that is achievable,” Araghchi said. 

President Trump and other administration officials have claimed that U.S. military strikes on June 21 “completely destroyed” Iran’s three nuclear sites — at Fordow, Natanz and Isfahan. 

A recent intelligence assessment, which was reported by multiple news outlets last week, said that the nuclear facility in Fordow was mostly destroyed, but the ones in Natanz and Isfahan were not and could potentially resume uranium enrichment. 

Sign up for the Morning Report
The latest in politics and policy. Direct to your inbox.

Apart from the White House, the Defense Department (DOD) has also pushed back against the intelligence report, saying that the June attacks, carried out by B-2 bombers and Tomahawk cruise missiles, obliterated all three sites. 

DOD’s chief spokesman Sean Parnell said to reporters earlier in July that the Pentagon’s assessments indicated that Iran’s nuclear program was set back by “one to two years.”

Israel initially attacked Iran on June 13, which led to a 12-day war between the two countries. A ceasefire was reached on June 24. 

Prior to the conflict, the U.S. and Iran completed five rounds of nuclear talks, although the two countries did not reach a deal. Trump pulled out of a former President Obama-negotiated deal in 2018.

“It is developed by ourselves. It is an achievement by ourselves. The technology is there. The scientists are there, the people who have run these facilities are there. Buildings can be rebuilt. Facilities can be rebuilt. Machines can be replaced,” Araghchi said. 

“I think the recent attack proved that there is no military option for our nuclear program,” the foreign minister added. 

Tags Abbas Araghchi Bret Baier Donald Trump Iran Iran nuclear facilities Iran nuclear program Israel Obama Sean Parnell Trump administration US military strikes

Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

See all Hill.TV See all Video