71 killed in Israeli attack on Iran prison, official says

The June 23 strike targeted the infamous Evin Prison in Tehran.

President Donald Trump told ABC News on Tuesday morning he is "not happy" with either Israel or Iran after the opening hours of a nascent ceasefire between the two combatants were marred by reported exchanges. Trump said Iran and Israel both "violated" the ceasefire that he announced late on Monday.

Through last week, the president and his administration continued to push back on an early intelligence report suggesting that the U.S. strikes on Iranian nuclear facilities may have only set Tehran's nuclear program back by months.

Jun 27, 2025, 12:48 PM EDT

Trump says he would bomb Iran again 'without a question'

President Donald Trump said on Friday he would bomb Iran again "without a question" if intelligence were to find that Iran can enrich uranium to a level higher than what he is comfortable with.

President Donald Trump speaks to the media, June 27, 2025, in the briefing room of the White House in Washington.
AFP via Getty Images

"Without a question. Absolutely," he told reporters in the White House briefing room.

"They're exhausted. The last thing they are thinking about is nuclear [weapons]," Trump said of Iran.

President Donald Trump speaks to the media, June 27, 2025, in the briefing room of the White House in Washington.
AFP via Getty Images

Responding to Ayatollah Ali Khamenei's claim that Iran won the war, Trump said, "You got beat to hell. Israel was beat up too, they were both beat up."

Jun 27, 2025, 12:26 PM EDT

Trump doubles down on claim Iran's nuclear sites were 'obliterated'

President Donald Trump on Friday doubled down on his claim that Iran's nuclear sites were "obliterated" and said it would take "years" before the country could restart its program.

"I don't believe that they're going to go back into nuclear anytime soon. They spent over $1 trillion on nuclear and they never got it together. And nothing was moved from the site, by the way, to do that is very dangerous. It's very, very heavy material," he told reporters in the White House briefing room on Friday.

President Donald Trump speaks alongside Attorney General Pam Bondi and Deputy Attorney General Todd Blanche during a news conference in the Brady Briefing Room of the White House, June 27, 2025, in Washington.
Andrew Caballero-Reynolds/AFP via Getty Images

Trump also said that Iran now wants to meet and negotiate a deal.

"I've been saying for 25 years, even as a civilian, you cannot let them have a nuclear weapon and that's what happened. It's been obliterated," he said. "It would be years before they could ever get going. And I really think it's probably the last thing they have to recover from a hell of a tough war."

Jun 27, 2025, 12:08 PM EDT

Iran may still be 'days' from nuke, Democrats skeptical uranium was destroyed

Following a classified briefing, House Speaker Mike Johnson said that Iran’s nuclear capabilities suffered a "major setback" after the U.S. bombed three sites there last weekend, telling reporters that lawmakers received a "thorough" and "very helpful" closed-door briefing -- but Democrats left the briefing worried that Iran’s cache of enriched uranium may have not been destroyed.

Asked about that uranium stockpile by ABC News, Johnson downplayed the significance of an initial intelligence assessment from the Pentagon which showed that Iran’s stockpile was not destroyed.

"We have a sense about that, some of this is classified, but I will tell you that there was a CIA press release, I think it went out yesterday, and they concluded that this is a quote, 'Iran's nuclear program has been severely damaged,’ unquote,” Johnson said. “I'll put that in layman's terms. I would say it's a substantial setback."

PHOTO: Speaker of the House Mike Johnson pauses for a reporters at the Capitol in Washington, June 27, 2025.
Speaker of the House Mike Johnson pauses for a reporters as he heads to the chamber for the final votes of the week, as President Donald Trump's sweeping domestic policy bill lingers in the Senate, awaiting consensus from divided Republicans, at the Capitol in Washington, June 27, 2025.
J. Scott Applewhite/AP

But the only PhD nuclear physicist serving in Congress, Rep. Bill Foster, told reporters that he worries Iran’s uranium survived.

"I know this technology pretty well. I was very disappointed that we learned very little about the inventory of high enriched uranium, 60% enriched uranium, and its whereabouts and what that meant for the breakout time to Iran's first nuclear device," Foster said. "There is, I think frankly, a very over-optimistic portrayal of what was and was not accomplished by this mission, because we do not have understanding and control of where all of that material is."

Democrats said there are “massive inconsistencies” remaining -- and if the uranium was not destroyed, Foster believes Iran could still be "days" or "a very brief period of time" from building a nuclear bomb.

"We're talking about 20 or 30 scuba tanks full of material, where any two or so of those scuba tanks provide enough material for a first nuclear weapon," he said. "That is what we're trying to understand – where the location is and the disposition in the situation where the intelligence may or may not be complete."

Foster said "the game was lost" when President Trump withdrew from the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action, also known as the Iran nuclear deal, in 2018.

"Under that under the JCPOA, we had very strict limits and enforced limits on their inventory of enriched uranium at different levels. And when that was lost, the game was lost," he said. "And now we're in a situation where they have very large inventories of quite significantly enriched uranium, and unfortunately that implies a very small breakout time to a first nuclear device."

Former Army Ranger Jason Crow of Colorado, leaving the briefing, said he was "shocked" by the "massive inconsistencies that remain between what Congress has been previously briefed and informed and what we heard today." The congressman added he is “not convinced whatsoever” that Iran’s nuclear sites have been completely destroyed.

-ABC News' John Parkinson and Lauren Peller

Jun 27, 2025, 10:17 AM EDT

Nuclear facilities not completely destroyed, Iranian foreign minister says

Iran's foreign minister said on Thursday that his country’s nuclear facilities were not completely destroyed and suggested Tehran still holds some leverage in potential future negotiations over its nuclear program.

"They thought they would completely destroy our nuclear facilities and leave our hands empty in negotiations, then say, ‘Come to negotiate.’ This didn't happen," Abbas Araghchi, the Iranian foreign minister said on Iranian State TV.

"The same won't happen with snapback, meaning it's not that the Europeans' hands will be full; on the contrary, their hands will be completely empty," he added.

Snapback is the term to describe the mechanism in the 2015 nuclear agreement that would quickly reimpose United Nations sanctions on Iran if it didn’t meet its nuclear commitments. The UK, France, Germany, Russia and China can trigger the mechanism if they find Iran in violation of the agreement. The U.S. lost that ability when President Donald Trump withdrew from the deal in his first term.

Araghchi also described what a potential nuclear agreement might look like even after the military strikes by the U.S. and Israel.

"Any potential agreement should have two main pillars: enrichment in Iran and the lifting of sanctions. On the other hand, there could also be another pillar, which is Iran's commitment to not moving towards a nuclear weapon," he said. "This is because it aligns with our standards, principles, and beliefs. We have no problem with this either. Therefore, if these three axes exist in any agreement, in our view, the possibility of reaching that agreement exists. Now, the details can be discussed."

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