The Institute for Science and International Security, a Washington non-proliferation think tank, used June 2026 satellite imagery to place Iran's 60 per cent enriched uranium across three hardened sites: 265 to 287 kg in backfilled tunnels at Esfahan, 80 kg at Fordow and 74 to 96 kg at Natanz. That totals as much as 461 kg, against the 440.9 kg the Islamabad memorandum commits Iran to destroy under international supervision. 1
Each figure comes from satellite imagery, not from an on-site count. The International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA), the UN's nuclear watchdog, has had no inspector access to Iran for more than 100 days, and the Esfahan tunnel entrances are backfilled. Its director-general Rafael Grossi, speaking at Fukushima on 26 June, said access "is going to happen" and that work on modalities and dates would begin soon, but named no date and holds no signed access instrument. 2
Iran's deputy foreign minister Kazem Gharibabadi the same day ruled out access before a final deal and the lifting of all sanctions, deepening the impasse Grossi described . US envoy Steve Witkoff's claim that Iran had sent the IAEA a letter clearing inspectors stayed unconfirmed by both Iran and the agency. The memorandum names the IAEA to supervise the destruction of the stockpile, yet the inspectors it names cannot enter the country to begin. 3
