Gulf Today

Iran tensions at heart of UN nuclear watchdog meeting

Western countries will be trying to find a way of censuring Iran without jeopardisi­ng fragile efforts to revive the 2015 deal between Tehran and major powers on its nuclear programme

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Iran’s recent decision to limit inspection­s by the UN’S nuclear watchdog will be at the heart of a meeting of its board of governors on Monday, with some members mulling a formal rebuke to Tehran.

Western countries will be trying to find a way of censuring Iran without jeopardisi­ng fragile efforts to revive the 2015 deal between Tehran and major powers on its nuclear programme.

The possibilit­y of a resolution criticisin­g Iran being passed at the board atracted sharp diplomatic comment in the run-up to the meeting.

“The Europeans have started a wrong move by supporting the US in the board of governors,” Iranian Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif said on Monday.

“We think this move will lead to the situation becoming disorganis­ed,” he said, according to the official Irna agency.

While President Joe Biden has said he is willing to bring the United States back to the 2015 deal, on Sunday Iran said the time was “not suitable” to hold an informal meeting with the US and the remaining parties to the accord - France,

Germany, Britain, China and Russia.

Diplomatic sources say that no decision has yet been taken by European states on whether or not to put forward a resolution as Iran will only be discussed later in the week at the meeting, being held via videoconfe­rence.

Russia has made clear its opposition to the prospect of a resolution criticisin­g Iran.

Russian ambassador Mikhail Ulyanov tweeted on Monday that such a move would be an “unfortunat­e miscalcula­tion.”

Earlier he had said that “the common responsibi­lity of all 35 Governors is to ensure that the debates ( even heated) do not negatively affect diplomatic efforts aimed at full restoratio­n of #JCPOA,” using the formal name for the 2015 deal.

Russia’s deputy foreign minister also blasted Washington for US strikes on Iran-backed militias in eastern Syria last week, saying the move threatened to scupper talks.

“There is no doubt that influentia­l forces in Washington have taken steps in order to derail this meeting,” Sergei Ryabkov was quoted by

Russian state news agency TASS as saying.

The JCPOA was sent into disarray when former US President Donald Trump dramatical­ly withdrew from it in 2018 and went on to impose swingeing economic sanctions on Iran. “We are running against time,” Ulyanov said. Zarif said that Iran hoped “that reason will prevail” at this week’s meeting.

“If it does not we do have solutions,” he said, without specifying what these were.

In a document circulated to IAEA member states ahead of this week’s meeting, the Iranian mission to the organisati­on said a critical resolution would be “counterpro­ductive and destructiv­e”.

The document also said the introducti­on of such a resolution would mark the “end” of the agreement reached with the IAEA last month to mitigate the impact of reduced inspection­s.

Under that temporary three-month arrangemen­t, Iran has pledged to keep recordings “of some activities and monitoring equipment” and hand them over to the IAEA when US sanctions are lited.

If a resolution censuring Iran is passed, it would be the first such resolution since June, which was itself the first in eight years.

Diplomatic sources say the Iranian atempt at “blackmail” over a possible resolution has gone down badly among European states.

The latest tensions come ater weeks in which Iran has continued breaking the limits laid down in the 2015 deal, for example by enriching uranium to 20 per cent and producing uranium metal.

Tehran insists it has the right to take these steps in retaliatio­n for American sanctions, and that the measures can be reversed as soon as sanctions are lited.

According to Kelsey Davenport, director for Nonprolife­ration Policy at the Arms Control Associatio­n think-tank, “the US would be foolish to waste the time bought” by the temporary agreement hammered out between Iran and the IAEA.

“It would be positive to have a concrete reciprocal action from the US acknowledg­ing that Iran showed some restraint by negotiatin­g this technical understand­ing,” she said.

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Lebanese oud maker and player, Nazih Ghadban, scrubs an oud at his workshop in Ras Baalbeck, Lebanon, on Monday.
Reuters ↑ Lebanese oud maker and player, Nazih Ghadban, scrubs an oud at his workshop in Ras Baalbeck, Lebanon, on Monday.

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