Netanyahu says Iran no longer has uranium enrichment capacity

Source
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu speaks during a press conference, amid the U.S.-Israel conflict with Iran, in Jerusalem, March 19, 2026.
Ronen Zvulun | Reuters

Iran no longer has the capacity to enrich uranium or make ballistic missiles after 20 days of ⁠U.S.-Israeli air attacks, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu told a news conference ​on Thursday.

"We are ​winning, and ​Iran is being decimated," Netanyahu said, noting that Iran's missile and drone arsenal is being massively degraded and will be destroyed.

"What ⁠we're ‌destroying now are the factories that ⁠produce the components to make these missiles and to make the nuclear weapons that they're trying to produce," Netanyahu said.

Netanyahu did not provide evidence ‌for his claim that Iran no longer had the capacity to enrich uranium.

Iran's nuclear program was the ​focus of mediated talks that ultimately collapsed with the U.S. and Israel launching an air attack on Iran on February 28. Iran has fired missiles ⁠back at Israel and other Gulf countries while also limiting tankers from using ‌the Straight of Hormuz.

Despite the nearly ‌three week war, it was still too soon to tell whether Iranians will take to the streets to try to overthrow their ⁠government, Netanyahu said.

"It's up to the Iranian people to ⁠show that, to choose the moment and ⁠to rise to the moment," he said.

While the war so far has been conducted via air ​attacks, Netanyahu said there has ‌to be a ground component as well and "there are many possibilities for this ground component." He did not elaborate.

Netanyahu also denied he dragged the United States into the conflict.

"Does anyone really think ​that someone can tell President Trump ‌what to do?" he said.

A satellite imagery taken on Jan. 30, 2026 shows a new roof over a previously destroyed building at Natanz nuclear site, Iran.
2026 Planet Labs PBC | Via Reuters
Choose CNBC as your preferred source on Google and never miss a moment from the most trusted name in business news.