Benjamin Netanyahu claimed at his first in-person press conference since the war began that "Iran no longer has the capacity to enrich uranium or make ballistic missiles" 1. He provided no evidence. No intelligence agency, allied government, or international body with inspection access has corroborated the statement.
The IAEA's own disclosures from the same week contradict it directly. The agency revealed that Iran has a new underground enrichment facility at Isfahan — the country's fourth known enrichment plant 2. Inspectors have been denied access and cannot determine whether it is operational or, in Director General Rafael Grossi's phrasing, "simply an empty hall" 3. Iran holds 440 kilograms of uranium enriched to 60% — enough, if enriched further to weapons-grade, for approximately ten nuclear weapons. Grossi stated days earlier that military action cannot eliminate Iran's nuclear programme: "Most probably, at the end of this, the material will still be there and the enrichment capacities will be there" .
The pattern of overclaimed destruction now runs through multiple levels of the US-Israeli war effort. DNI Tulsi Gabbard submitted written testimony to the Senate Intelligence Committee asserting Iran's enrichment programme was "obliterated" — then omitted that word from her verbal remarks . Senator Mark Warner accused her of choosing "to omit the parts that contradict Trump." Netanyahu's press conference assertion goes further than even Gabbard's written text, claiming total elimination of capability rather than severe damage. The E3 — the United Kingdom, France, and Germany — issued a statement to the IAEA Board of Governors referencing the Isfahan access denial 4, a move that distances European governments from the Israeli and American characterisation without openly challenging it.
Iran's four-decade investment in nuclear knowledge, centrifuge manufacturing capability, and hardened underground facilities was designed to survive exactly this kind of military campaign. The programme's architecture — dispersed across multiple sites, buried under mountains at Fordow, replicated at Isfahan — reflects lessons Tehran drew from Israel's 1981 strike on Iraq's Osirak reactor: no single facility whose destruction ends the programme. Netanyahu's claim requires the audience to accept that air power accomplished what the IAEA's director general — the one person with both the mandate and the technical capacity to assess it — has explicitly said air power cannot do. The evidence offered for that claim remains, three weeks into the war, a press conference assertion and nothing more.
