A new analysis is raising fresh questions about how close Iran may be to having the option to build a nuclear weapon. The concern is not that a bomb has been announced, but that the technical barriers appear lower than they were before, even after repeated strikes on parts of Iran’s nuclear infrastructure.
Recent assessments from international monitors and regional security analysts say Iran still has a large stockpile of uranium enriched to 60%, a level far above civilian use and much closer to weapons-grade material. That has kept attention on whether Tehran remains a threshold nuclear state or could decide to move further.
The issue is also political. Pressure from war, outside attacks, and hardline voices at home could reshape Iran’s strategy more than the physical damage alone. Even if facilities are hit, the expertise, research, and production knowledge behind the program do not disappear.
For now, there is no confirmed evidence that Iran has openly decided to build a bomb. But the combination of reduced transparency, limited inspections, and a large enriched stockpile is keeping fears alive.

