Fresh satellite images are raising alarms across the intelligence community as Iran appears to be quietly rebuilding parts of its bombed nuclear facilities.

The disturbing discovery comes only weeks after the United States and Israel launched airstrikes that devastated those very locations, which Western analysts identified as key nodes in Tehran’s nuclear ambitions.

The images, obtained by CNN from private firms, show renewed construction at both the Parchin Military Complex and the site known as Pickaxe Mountain.

According to analysts, the pattern of concrete work, construction equipment and site sealing unmistakably points to an effort by the Iranian regime to restore its nuclear capacity under the guise of reconstruction.

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Both facilities were heavily damaged in coordinated US and Israeli strikes beginning in late February.

Those targets had long been at the center of suspicion about Iran’s covert nuclear activities.

Parchin in particular had been encased in concrete to protect buried chambers believed to have been used for weapons experiments.

Yet new photos reveal those impact sites are being patched and reinforced, suggesting the regime has no intention of giving up on its nuclear dreams.

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Images from June show three cratered areas at Parchin that were cleared and temporarily covered.

By mid July, the damage appeared sealed, concrete mixers were visible, and new layers of mesh and material were being applied.

The timing of this activity mirrors the signing of a Memorandum of Understanding between the United States and Iran, a deal that supposedly froze Iran’s nuclear work in exchange for temporary cease fire commitments in the Strait of Hormuz.

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That deal now looks like a hollow paper promise. Iranian officials continue to meet with representatives from Oman, but back home they seem more concerned with patching holes in weapons labs than with keeping their word.

The Institute for Science and International Security, in an analysis released Saturday, said the fresh construction “shows a commitment by Iran to rebuild and reconstitute the capabilities previously lost, despite the immense damage at the site.”

This analysis marks the second such attempt by Iran to rebuild at Parchin after earlier bombings.

The same report concluded that Iran’s newest work included “more permanent sealing” of impact points and additional hardening of the facility’s physical structure.

The Institute’s founder, David Albright, called the reconstruction effort “significant and new,” further validating concerns Iran has no intention of abiding by international restrictions.

Satellite imagery also shows traffic moving in and out of Pickaxe Mountain, a location long believed to host underground uranium enrichment operations.

Trucks, equipment movement, and clear signs of restored power infrastructure all point to renewed activity.

The presence of heavy mixers and access routes under repair indicate that Tehran is likely working around the clock to bring these sites back online.

The Memorandum of Understanding required Iran to “maintain the current status quo” of its nuclear program.

Any fresh construction would directly violate that clause. International observers are once again witnessing the regime play the same old game: promise peace in negotiations while pursuing weapons in secret.

Predictably, the Biden-era diplomatic flexibility that once favored Iran’s word has been replaced by renewed military vigilance under President Trump’s administration, which has shown little patience for Tehran’s deceit.

For decades, inspectors with the International Atomic Energy Agency have struggled for access to Parchin. In 2004 and 2005, they were allowed limited tours but were blocked from key sections. By 2006 the regime shut the door entirely.

Each time inspectors came close to exposing something, the Iranians either covered it up or bulldozed it. History now appears to be repeating itself with concrete instead of bulldozers.

The Parchin complex is also home to Iran’s missile manufacturing lines, which feed weapons to proxy groups that terrorize Israel, Saudi Arabia, and American naval forces in the Gulf.

The Teleghan 2 sector of that complex was hit twice in the most recent campaign, yet Iran remains intent on resurrecting it.

The satellite visuals show workers and vehicles in motion only weeks after those strikes.

The timing could not be more provocative.

Tehran is already under intense pressure from Washington, which has warned that any further aggression in the Strait of Hormuz will result in overwhelming force.

Trump himself declared earlier this month that if Iran attempts retribution for the killings of its leadership, “1,000 Missiles Locked and Loaded” will greet them.

While Natanz, Fordow, and Isfahan appear calm for now, experts believe these smaller sites could serve as fallback hubs for Iran’s scientific and nuclear research teams.

The regime’s deep tunnels and mountain labs have always been designed to outwit aerial assaults, and now Tehran’s engineers seem determined to prove that even Western precision strikes will not keep them down.

Iran’s leadership is once again playing with fire.

Their denial of visible, documented activity only cements the perception that they are operating outside the rules they agreed to follow.

Washington has yet to confirm whether new sanctions or strikes are on the table, but with evidence mounting, the world is seeing the same pattern that led to conflict before.

The images are a clear reminder that the Iranian regime thrives on deception.

No amount of concrete will cover up their lies or hide the fact they are once again flirting with nuclear catastrophe.

America’s eyes in the sky are watching, and if history is any indicator, the next round of punishment might be far worse than the last.

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