World | Fordow nuclear facility US Could Destroy Iran's Nuclear Bunker: Experts Facility not as 'impregnable' as Iran seems to believe By Kevin Spak Posted Mar 1, 2012 7:33 AM CST Copied This Sept. 26, 2009 file satellite image provided by GeoEye shows the location of the underground Fordow nuclear site, 20 miles north, northeast of Qom. (AP Photo/GeoEye Satellite Image, IHS Jane's Analysis, File) The Obama administration reportedly has little desire to launch a preemptive strike on Iran's nuclear facilities, but just in case it ever did, US weaponry is capable of destroying even Iran's most protected site, experts tell the Washington Post. Iran's Fordow facility—which, until recently, the country had been keeping secret—was specifically built underneath the northwestern mountain ranges to protect it from aerial assault. Iran's civil defense chief once boasted that it was "impregnable." US officials admit that they can't destroy the facility in one shot. But after recent training exercises on similar targets, they're confident that given several days of sustained attacks, the Pentagon's latest bunker-buster, the Massive Ordnance Penetrator, could collapse the tunnels around the facility and destroy the centrifuges buried there. Israel has less advanced bunker busters, and that's part of the reason it's more eager to attack; it believes its window of opportunity is closing as Iran moves operations underground. Read These Next A college coach featured on Netflix was fatally shot in Oakland. Megyn Kelly questions whether Epstein is technically a pedophile. A startling development after prisoner is spared from execution. Trump: I'm ordering up investigations on Democrats over Epstein. Report an error