Pentagon Confirms Massive Overnight U.S. Operation Targeting Fordo, Natanz, and Isfahan
At a high-stakes Pentagon briefing today, Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth and Air Force General Dan Caine publicly confirmed what global intelligence analysts had quietly begun piecing together overnight: the United States conducted a precision, high-impact strike on three of Iran’s most heavily fortified nuclear sites — Fordo, Natanz, and Isfahan.
The operation, codenamed Midnight Hammer, wasn’t just a military maneuver — it was a geopolitical statement delivered through supersonic steel. Planned in classified circles and executed without warning, the mission shattered decades of strategic ambiguity surrounding the U.S. stance on Iran’s nuclear development. In less than an hour, decades of underground enrichment infrastructure were targeted and crippled using some of the most advanced weaponry in America’s arsenal.
These weren’t warning shots. This wasn’t deterrence by presence. It was a direct, surgical assault — designed to cripple Iran’s nuclear infrastructure at its root, with no collateral intention of regime change, no battlefield declaration, and no media theatrics. Just silence, until impact.
“The order we received from our Commander in Chief was focused, it was powerful, and it was clear,” Hegseth told reporters. “We devastated the Iranian nuclear program.”
According to high-level U.S. sources, the operation represents one of the most technologically complex, geographically extended, and tactically deceptive long-range airstrike campaigns in modern history. Aircraft lifted off in complete radio silence. Multiple deception packages flew separate vectors to confuse enemy radar systems. And the final approach involved stealth bombers using low-emission flight paths, slipping past Iran’s early warning systems like ghosts in a geopolitical graveyard.
The choice of targets was no accident. Fordo — a buried uranium enrichment facility embedded deep within a mountain. Natanz — the backbone of Iran’s centrifuge development. Isfahan — the critical conversion and reactor support site. By hitting these three in sequence, the operation effectively disabled the upper, middle, and base tiers of Iran’s nuclear ladder.
It also sent a clear message: the U.S. still retains the reach, the weapons, and the will to act — even in a world tangled in proxy warfare, deniability games, and drone-based distractions.
“This was not about regime change,” Hegseth clarified. TRJ told you two articles ago — Pre-War and The War. This strike was always about the program, not the politicians. “This was about neutralizing a threat that had grown too close for comfort — to us, and to our allies.” In other words: it wasn’t symbolic. It was strategic. And it wasn’t a warning — it was a takedown.
THE STRIKE
The operation began long before the first explosion — in silence, shadows, and zero broadcast. For 18 hours, the strike package advanced under radio silence, navigating international airspace with no signal, no chatter, and no margin for error.
At 6:40 p.m. EDT, the silence broke.
The first of seven B-2 Spirit stealth bombers reached its target. Beneath it: Fordo, Iran’s most heavily fortified uranium enrichment site — buried deep within the mountains. From the belly of the aircraft, two 30,000-pound GBU-57 Massive Ordnance Penetrators (MOPs) dropped — designed not to explode on impact, but to dig. Through concrete. Through rock. Through denial.
This was the first operational deployment of the GBU-57 — a signal not of intent, but of irreversible commitment. A bomb built for war finally went to war. But it didn’t end with Fordo.
Within minutes, two more MOPs struck Natanz — the central hub of Iran’s centrifuge production. Then two more hit Isfahan, targeting uranium conversion systems and nuclear support infrastructure. Six bunker-busting bombs in total — each one surgically placed, each one devastating by design.
“We used two MOPs at each location — Fordo, Natanz, and Isfahan,” Gen. Caine confirmed during the Pentagon briefing. “This was the first time the GBU-57 has been used in live combat.”
Meanwhile, a U.S. submarine operating in the CENTCOM region launched more than two dozen Tomahawk cruise missiles, targeting three additional strategic sites: a power relay node supporting Fordo’s operations, a weapons logistics facility near Isfahan, and a command-and-control bunker west of Natanz.
Total confirmed strike zones: six.
Three nuclear. Three support. One message.
The final munitions count: 75 precision-guided weapons, coordinated across air and sea, delivered in under an hour. Not a single shot was fired in return. Iran’s air defenses never engaged. No fighters scrambled. The element of surprise was absolute — and fatal.
Official Joint Staff map released by the Department of Defense, showing the mission arc of Operation Midnight Hammer — June 21–22, 2025.


Image Title: Operation Midnight Hammer – 250622-D-D0439-1234
Image: Satellite image by Maxar Technologies




Image: Satellite image by Maxar Technologies




STRATEGIC DECEPTION
What made Operation Midnight Hammer especially potent wasn’t just the weight of the ordnance — it was the precision of the misdirection.
This wasn’t just a bombing run. It was a playbook in psychological warfare — executed in total silence, and understood only by those who wrote the script.
To cloak the real trajectory of the strike package, decoy aircraft were launched westward over the Pacific, simulating long-range deployments that never intended to enter Iranian airspace. Their purpose wasn’t to strike — it was to be seen. To create noise. To lure attention away from the actual path cutting through Europe and the Middle East.
These aircraft weren’t armed — they were sacrificial signatures, designed to fool satellites, confuse foreign observers, and mislead Iran’s early warning systems.
Backed by a mix of fourth- and fifth-generation fighters, the real package moved low and fast — blending stealth with signal-suppression altitude sweeps, radar reflection minimization, and coordinated emissions control. The electronic silence wasn’t just for show. It was the kill switch.
“The U.S. employed several deception tactics — including decoys — as the aircraft pushed out in front of the strike package,” Gen. Caine said. “Iran’s fighters didn’t scramble. Their SAM systems didn’t see us. And there were no shots fired on exit.”
In a world where warfare is often loud, televised, and signaled in advance, Midnight Hammer struck in the one domain still feared by modern defenses: the unknown. By the time Iran realized it wasn’t a drill — the sky had already gone black.
ZERO RETALIATION — SO FAR
For a strike this large, this loud, and this surgical — the silence afterward was deafening.
Despite the devastation across Iran’s nuclear infrastructure, there was no immediate military response. No scramble. No interception. No return fire. According to General Caine, “We are unaware of any shots fired at the package on the way out.”
Iran’s defenses didn’t engage — because they never saw it coming.
But the absence of a response doesn’t mean the story is over. U.S. Central Command has raised force protection levels across the region, anticipating possible delayed retaliation — not just from Tehran itself, but from its vast constellation of proxy militias spread across Iraq, Syria, Lebanon, and Yemen.
These groups — from Hezbollah to Kata’ib Hezbollah, to the Houthis — don’t operate on military timelines. They operate on signals, messaging, and asymmetrical cues. And for them, the real question isn’t how fast they’ll respond — it’s where and against whom.
The Pentagon knows this. The region knows this. And anyone watching closely knows that no response yet doesn’t mean no response coming.
For now, the skies are quiet. But the ground may not stay still.
INTENT — NOT REGIME CHANGE
This wasn’t a coup. It wasn’t a campaign to topple Tehran.
It was a surgical strike with a singular purpose — erase the nuclear threat.
Both Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth and General Dan Caine made it clear: Operation Midnight Hammer was not about regime change. It was preemptive, precise, and entirely focused on Iran’s nuclear weapons infrastructure.
“This was about neutralizing a direct threat to our national security and to our allies, particularly Israel,” Hegseth said.
“Not Iranian citizens. Not their military — just the nuclear capability they refused to abandon.”
No civilian zones were targeted. No mass mobilization occurred. And no attempt was made to engage conventional Iranian forces. This was a kill shot — not a war trigger.
Hegseth also acknowledged the silent role of Israel, crediting them with aiding in “positioning and logistics.” He didn’t name specifics. He didn’t have to. The implication was clear: Israel helped line up the shot. The U.S. pulled the trigger. And the regime? It stayed untouched — for now.
“NO OTHER MILITARY COULD DO THIS”
General Dan Caine closed the Pentagon briefing not with bravado — but with a hard truth.
“This went from strategic planning to global execution in a matter of weeks,” he said.
“The coordination, speed, and stealth of this strike proves what we’ve always known: no other force on Earth could have pulled this off.”
The message wasn’t just for Iran. It was for every adversary watching from the shadows — every regime weighing red lines, and every observer questioning America’s capability to act without spectacle. Midnight Hammer was proof: when the order comes, the U.S. military doesn’t telegraph. It terminates.
President Trump, in a separate briefing later that day, drove the final point home with chilling clarity:
“This was necessary. This was decisive. And this was the last warning.”
There was no need to elaborate. The warning wasn’t rhetorical. It was backed by satellite data, cratered bunkers, and 75 precision strikes that never triggered a single radar alert. And for anyone still doubting America’s reach? The B-2s were already home.
Hegseth, Caine Laud Success of U.S. Strike on Iran Nuke Sites — At a Pentagon briefing today, Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth and Gen. Dan Caine hailed the success of “Operation Midnight Hammer,” the overnight U.S. strike targeting Iran’s nuclear sites at Fordo, Natanz, and Isfahan. (Video)

TRJ BLACK FILE — OPERATION MIDNIGHT HAMMER
This is not speculation. This is confirmed U.S. doctrine in motion.
Classification: Tier-1 Strategic Strike Archive
Targets: Fordo, Natanz, Isfahan (Primary) — 3 additional strike zones (Support Infrastructure)
Operation Window: June 21–22, 2025
Ordnance Deployed: 6x GBU-57 MOPs, 24+ Tomahawks, 75 precision-guided weapons total
Confirmed by: Gen. Dan Caine, Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth — Pentagon Briefing
Result: Total destruction of core Iranian nuclear infrastructure. Zero U.S. casualties. Zero air intercepts. Full tactical surprise.
Strategic Impact: No international military retaliation. Proxy forces remain verbally activated, but tactically restrained. Strait of Hormuz remains open. Global powers condemn but do not intervene.
This was not a warning. It was a message.
And the world heard it in silence.
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Great article John. A ruthless strike with a clear message. I hope there are no recriminations from other countries, but then I don’t think anyone wants to tangle with the might of the US military.
Thanks so much, Paul — I really appreciate you taking the time to read and share your thoughts. You’re absolutely right: the strike was ruthless, but it was also precise, strategic, and tightly executed. As for international fallout, we’re keeping a close eye on it — but like you said, few are eager to challenge the full weight of U.S. capability when it moves at that level. Let’s hope cooler heads prevail moving forward. 🙏
Brilliant work congratulations 🎊
Thank you very much, R. Marshall! I truly appreciate the support. I hope you have a great night! 😎