The Borneo Post

Iran to end curbs on uranium enrichment stockpile

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In the next stage Iran will also stop observing restrictio­ns on the level of uranium enrichment and measures regarding modernisin­g Arak heavy water reactor. Iran’s Supreme National Security Council

Iran said on Wednesday it will stop respecting limits on its nuclear activities agreed under a landmark 2015 deal unless other powers help Tehran bypass renewed US sanctions, amid rising tensions with Washington.

The move was part of a package of measures announced by Iran in response to the sweeping unilateral sanctions reimposed by Washington in the 12 months since it quit the agreement, which have had a severe effect on the Iranian economy.

They came as Washington stepped up its war of words against Tehran, with US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo making a hastily organised visit to neighbouri­ng Iraq where he accused Iran of planning “imminent” attacks.

Adding to the tensions, Washington announced it was deploying an aircraft carrier strike group with several nuclearcap­able B-52 bombers to the Middle East and national security adviser John Bolton warned Washington would respond with “unrelentin­g force” to any attack by Tehran.

Under the landmark deal agreed by US President Donald Trump’s predecesso­r Barack Obama, the six parties to the agreement were supposed to lift nuclear-related sanctions on Iran in return for it reining in its nuclear activities to ease fears it was seeking the capability to produce an atomic bomb.

But the promised sanctions relief has failed to materialis­e as European and Asian banks and oil companies have moved swiftly to abide by the renewed US sanctions for fear of financial or commercial repercussi­ons.

Iran warned that if the five other parties to the agreement – Britain, China, France, Germany and Russia – failed to deliver on their commitment­s within 60 days to help Tehran benefit from the deal despite the US sanctions, it would suspend other key limits set by the deal.

Iran’s Supreme National Security Council said the measures were necessary to “secure its rights and bring back balance” after the unilateral moves by the Trump administra­tion.

“The Islamic Republic of Iran does not at the current stage consider itself committed to observing restrictio­ns regarding storing enriched uranium stocks and heavy water stocks,” the Supreme National Security Council said.

“The remaining parties to the (deal) are given 60 days to implement their commitment­s, in particular in the fields of banking and oil,” the council added.

“In the next stage Iran will also stop observing restrictio­ns on the level of uranium enrichment and measures regarding modernisin­g Arak heavy water reactor.”

Uranium enriched to much higher levels than Iran’s current stocks can be used as the fissile core of a nuclear weapon, while heavy water is a source of plutonium which can be used an alternativ­e way to produce a warhead.

The deal restricted Iran from enriching uranium to more than 3.67 per cent, the level commonly used in power generation, and barred it from building additional heavy water reactors or accumulati­ng stocks of more than 130 tonnes of heavy water. — AFP

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 ??  ?? — AFP photo A file combinatio­n photo shows satellite images of the Natanz uranium enrichment site, 160km south of Tehran, Iran. The left image was captured by a DigitalGlo­be in September 2002 and the right in January, 2006.
— AFP photo A file combinatio­n photo shows satellite images of the Natanz uranium enrichment site, 160km south of Tehran, Iran. The left image was captured by a DigitalGlo­be in September 2002 and the right in January, 2006.

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