Vienna is currently experiencing a certain kind of silence that is worth noting. The world anticipated that Rafael Grossi, the head of the International Atomic Energy Agency, would confirm what the White House had been broadcasting for days when he appeared before his Board of Governors on March 2. The blows had struck. The websites were completed. As Donald Trump likes to say, Iran’s nuclear aspirations had been crushed. In reality, Grossi’s words were considerably more subdued and fascinating. He had no proof that any of Iran’s nuclear facilities had been struck or damaged.
By now, the most telling aspect of the entire conflict is the difference between Vienna’s caution and Washington’s confidence. Grossi is not directly contradicting the United States. He’s taking a more subdued approach. He is pointing out that Tehran has stopped returning calls and that the IAEA has not visited Iran’s bombed facilities since the earlier strikes back in June 2025. He stated, “Efforts to contact the Iranian nuclear regulatory authorities continue, with no response so far,” in that cautious diplomatic register that is always more significant than it seems.
Reza Najafi, Iran’s ambassador to the agency, entered the corridor minutes after Grossi concluded his remarks and informed reporters that Natanz had indeed been hit the day before. After that, he departed. Thus, three distinct realities are moving in opposing directions at the agency’s headquarters on a single morning. The Americans claim that the work is finished. The Iranians claim that attacks are occurring at their protected, peaceful locations. Furthermore, the IAEA, which is the only organization legally required to examine any of this, claims it is genuinely unsure.

The familiarity of this pattern is difficult to ignore. Anyone who experienced Iraq in 2003 will be able to identify the pattern: self-assured assertions regarding weapons programs, the presentation of satellite imagery as conclusive, and the inspectors‘ quiet insistence that they must see things for themselves before approving. For the same reason that Grossi is now making himself uncomfortable, Hans Blix made himself unpopular. Governments at war typically don’t want the watchdogs to ask awkward questions about the evidence.
The IAEA itself declared in May 2025 that it had “no credible indications of an ongoing, undeclared structured nuclear program” inside Iran, which makes the current situation even more peculiar. Just two months prior, the US Director of National Intelligence informed Congress that the intelligence community still believed Iran was not developing a nuclear weapon. The strikes followed. They were partially justified by the fact that Iran was in danger. At the time, the Arms Control Association pointed out that Israel’s prime minister had not provided any convincing proof to support the assertion. The bombs continued despite all of this.
The bizarre afterlife starts now. The underground facility was at least severely damaged in June, and the above-ground halls at Natanz are reportedly completely destroyed. However, the terms “crushed” and “destroyed” are not interchangeable, and this distinction is important when estimating the amount of enriched uranium that may still exist, its location, and Iran’s potential future actions. In Vienna, the political theater seems to be outpacing technical reality. Grossi keeps saying the same thing about the necessity of going back to diplomacy, but each time it sounds a little worn out, like someone who has been disregarded.
As this develops, it seems unlikely that the more difficult question is whether the sites were compromised. Whether anyone outside of Tehran truly understands what was inside them is the question. “Crushed” is still a political assertion rather than an established fact until inspectors are permitted to return. Furthermore, in the peculiar logic of nuclear politics, asserting that a program is destroyed when it is not visible tends to worsen rather than improve the next crisis.
