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International News: The Israeli airstrike targeted critical structures at Iran's Natanz nuclear facility. While the main underground chamber remains untouched, the upper infrastructure has reportedly sustained significant harm. Power systems that keep uranium centrifuges running have gone dark. These centrifuges are essential for uranium enrichment, and sudden shutdowns could lead to malfunction or even partial exposure of toxic materials used in the process.
Top nuclear experts have clarified: this is not a nuclear bomb situation, but that doesn’t mean there’s no danger. Uranium hexafluoride, a highly reactive chemical used in enrichment, may have leaked. It can cause severe internal injuries if inhaled. While no radioactive release has been confirmed outside the facility, the internal safety breaches are a serious concern.
Scientifically speaking, if uranium hexafluoride escapes into the atmosphere, it can travel with wind patterns. Though the scale is still unknown, experts say neighboring regions—including parts of South Asia—could face minimal yet traceable exposure under certain weather conditions. India’s environment agencies are monitoring this closely but haven’t raised public alarms yet.
Iran's nuclear sites like Natanz don’t operate in a vacuum. If safety barriers are damaged and air systems fail, the immediate risk spreads beyond Iran’s borders. And with Israel targeting suspected nuclear components again, even the tiniest breach can trigger international fallout—politically and environmentally.
One critical myth is that radiation only spreads through nuclear detonation. In reality, enrichment accidents—caused by sabotage or airstrikes—can also leak harmful substances. The world saw this during past reactor incidents, and experts are now flagging early symptoms of contamination risk at Natanz. It’s chemical for now, but any escalation could shift that narrative.
Though there's no immediate threat to Indian soil, national agencies are not taking chances. Airflow models and satellite-based radiation detection systems are already activated. While current data suggests no cross-border contamination, India remains alert—especially as tensions in West Asia continue to rise.