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The Bombing of Iran May Teach an Unwelcome Lesson on Nuclear Weapons

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News Analysis

Will America’s pre-emptive strike discourage other countries from pursuing a weapon — or just the opposite?

A group of boys and men walking across a city street. Behind them is a large poster showing Iranian scientists smiling with an illustration of a massive explosion in front of them.
A poster depicting Iranian scientists creating the country’s first hypersonic ballistic missile, on a street in Tehran last year.Credit...Arash Khamooshi for The New York Times

Mark Landler

By Mark Landler

Mark Landler reported on nuclear negotiations between the United States and Iran as a White House correspondent during the Obama administration.

June 25, 2025, 12:01 a.m. ET

It has been nearly two decades since any country elbowed its way into the club of nuclear-armed nations. President Trump, with his bombing of three Iranian nuclear installations last weekend, has vowed to keep the door shut.

Whether Mr. Trump’s pre-emptive strike will succeed in doing that is hard to predict, so soon after the attack and the fragile cease-fire that has followed. But already it is stirring fears that Iran, and other countries, will draw a very different conclusion than the one the White House intended: that having a bomb is the only protection in a threatening world.

The last country to get one, North Korea, has never faced such an attack. After years of defying demands to dismantle its nuclear program, it is now viewed as largely impregnable. Mr. Trump exchanged friendly letters with its dictator, Kim Jong-un, and met him twice in a fruitless effort to negotiate a deal. In Iran’s case, Mr. Trump deployed B-2 bombers just weeks after making a fresh diplomatic overture to its leaders.

“The risks of Iran acquiring a small nuclear arsenal are now higher than they were before the events of last week,” said Robert J. Einhorn, an arms control expert who negotiated with Iran during the Obama administration. “We can assume there are a number of hard-liners who are arguing that they should cross that nuclear threshold.”

Iran would face formidable hurdles to producing a bomb even if it made a concerted dash for one, Mr. Einhorn said, not least the knowledge that if the United States and Israel detect such a move, they will strike again. It is far from clear that Iran’s leaders, isolated, weakened and in disarray, want to provoke them.

Image

The Fordo nuclear enrichment facility in Iran, after U.S. strikes, on Sunday, shown in a satellite image released by Maxar Technologies.Credit...Maxar Technologies, via Associated Press

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