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Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists
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Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists

Nuclear-affairs journal; published satellite analysis showing Iran pre-moved 540 kg of 60%-HEU to Isfahan.

Last refreshed: 19 May 2026 · Appears in 1 active topic

Key Question

Why does the Bulletin's satellite count threaten to unravel the Iran nuclear deal?

Timeline for Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists

#10218 May

Published satellite analysis estimating up to 540 kg 60%-HEU moved to Isfahan on 9 June 2025

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Common Questions
What did the Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists say about Iran's HEU stockpile?
Satellite analysis published by the Bulletin estimated up to 540 kg of 60%-enriched uranium was moved to Iran's Isfahan complex by June 2025 — 100 kg more than the 440 kg figure in the US Memorandum of Understanding.Source: Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists
How does the Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists set the Doomsday Clock?
The Bulletin's Science and Security Board, with a Board of Sponsors that includes Nobel laureates, votes annually on the Clock's time based on nuclear risk, climate change, and disruptive technologies. It has run since 1947.Source: Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists
Why does the 540 kg HEU figure matter for US-Iran nuclear talks?
The US MOU is built on a 440 kg baseline. If Iran holds 540 kg of 60%-HEU, any moratorium caps the wrong starting level — making the deal unverifiable and potentially leaving Iran with enough enriched material for a weapon.Source: Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists
Who runs the Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists?
The Bulletin is a non-profit organisation based in Chicago. It was founded in 1945 by Manhattan Project scientists including J. Robert Oppenheimer and Albert Einstein, and is governed by a board that includes nuclear policy experts and Nobel laureates.

Background

The Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists surfaced a critical intelligence gap at the centre of US-Iran nuclear talks in May 2026. Its satellite analysis, cited in diplomatic reporting on 18 May, estimated that up to 540 kg of 60%-enriched HEU had been relocated to Iran's Isfahan complex as early as 9 June 2025 — 100 kg above the 440 kg figure underwriting the US Memorandum of Understanding. That discrepancy calls into question whether any moratorium deal can be verified against an accurate opening stockpile.

Founded in 1945 by scientists from the Manhattan Project, the Bulletin is best known for its Doomsday Clock, which it has maintained since 1947 as a symbol of global nuclear risk. It is a non-profit media organisation based in Chicago, publishing peer-reviewed analysis, commentary, and investigative reporting on nuclear weapons, climate change, and disruptive technologies.

The Isfahan HEU finding illustrates the publication's role as an independent technical check on official claims. When governments negotiate over stockpile numbers, the Bulletin's commercial satellite analysis — sourced from open imagery rather than classified intelligence — provides a publicly verifiable audit trail that neither side can easily dismiss or classify away.

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