
Dimona
Israeli desert city housing the nuclear research centre struck by Iran in 2026.
Last refreshed: 30 March 2026 · Appears in 1 active topic
Did Iran's missiles come close enough to Dimona's reactor to trigger a nuclear emergency?
Timeline for Dimona
Mentioned in: IRGC media: opacity is the deterrent
Iran Conflict 2026Mentioned in: Zaporizhzhia blacks out for 19th time
Russia-Ukraine War 2026Iran airs AI Khamenei footage confirming gap
Iran Conflict 2026IDF Admits Air Defence Failures at Dimona and Arad
Iran Conflict 2026Mentioned in: CENTCOM: 9,000 targets, 140 ships in 25d
Iran Conflict 2026What is Dimona?
Was Dimona's nuclear reactor hit by Iran?
Did Israel's missile defence fail at Dimona?
Background
Dimona is a city in the Negev desert of southern Israel, founded in 1955 as part of Ben-Gurion's vision for populating the Negev. It is home to the Shimon Peres Negev Nuclear Research Centre, Israel's classified nuclear facility, widely believed to be the source of its undeclared nuclear arsenal. Israel maintains a policy of nuclear ambiguity, neither confirming nor denying weapons capability.
In the 2026 Iran-Israel conflict, Dimona became a direct target. Iranian Ballistic Missiles struck the city, wounding 40 people including a 12-year-old. The IAEA confirmed no reactor damage and no abnormal radiation levels. Israeli firefighters confirmed interceptors launched from Dimona failed to intercept the missiles, the second acknowledged penetration of Israeli air defences in the conflict.
The strikes raised acute questions about whether Iran was directly targeting Israeli nuclear infrastructure. The Natanz Fuel Enrichment Plant had been hit by US forces the same day, and Tehran framed Dimona as reciprocal escalation. With Arrow-3 failing to intercept over the most sensitive site in Israel, the reliability of its layered missile defence is now openly contested.