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Satellite Imagery Shows Heightened Security

Fearing a Ground Invasion, Iran Seals Off Isfahan Nuclear Tunnels 

New high-resolution imagery from ISIS reveals a deliberate "lockdown" at Iran’s Isfahan facility. Following the burial of tunnel entrances in February, Iranian forces have now added roadblocks and earth berms to deter ground raids on its 60% enriched uranium stockpile.

Iran fortifies Isfahan nuclear tunnels
Iran fortifies Isfahan nuclear tunnels (Photo: ISIS)

New high-resolution commercial satellite imagery shows Iran has further fortified the underground tunnel complex at its Isfahan nuclear facility.

According to an analysis released yesterday (April 9, 2026) by the Institute for Science and International Security (ISIS), images taken on April 8 reveal makeshift roadblocks and added physical barriers now installed directly in front of all three tunnel entrances. These include earth berms, debris, fencing, and other obstacles specifically designed to slow or prevent ground access.

The entrances themselves were already completely buried with soil back in February. ISIS assesses this is not preparation to reopen the site for operations, but rather a deliberate lockdown to protect it against potential airstrikes or special-forces raids.

Key context (per IAEA and ISIS):

This latest move comes as regional tensions remain high and the Isfahan complex continues to be viewed by Tehran as a highly sensitive target.

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