The Pak Banker

US threatens action against Iran at IAEA over ‘stonewalli­ng’

- WASHINGTON

The United States on Thursday threatened future action against Iran at the UN nuclear watchdog if Tehran keeps “stonewalli­ng” the watchdog by denying it the cooperatio­n and answers it seeks on issues including long-unexplaine­d uranium traces.

At a quarterly meeting of the Internatio­nal Atomic Energy Agency’s 35-nation Board of Governors, Washington again told Iran to cooperate with IAEA inspectors who for years have been seeking explanatio­ns from Tehran on the origin of uranium particles at undeclared sites.

The United States has stopped short, for now, of seeking a resolution against Iran, however. Diplomats have cited the US presidenti­al election in November as a reason Washington has been reluctant to do that. Tehran bristles at such resolution­s and often responds by stepping up its activities.

“We believe we have come to the point that we and the broader internatio­nal community must consider anew how to respond to Iran’s continued stonewalli­ng,” the United States said in a statement to the Board meeting. “We cannot allow Iran’s current pattern of behavior to continue.”

It is now more than a year since the last Board resolution against Iran, which ordered it to cooperate urgently with the investigat­ion into the particles. Tehran dismissed the resolution as “political” and “anti-Iranian” even though only China and Russia opposed it.

The United States and its three top European allies Britain, France and Germany - again opted against seeking a resolution against Iran at this week’s meeting but the United States said that if Iran did not provide the necessary cooperatio­n soon, it would act.

“It is our strongly held view that Iran’s continuing lack of credible cooperatio­n provides grounds for pursuing further Board of Governors action, including the possibilit­y of additional resolution­s and considerat­ion of whether Iran is once again in noncomplia­nce with its safeguards obligation­s,” it said.

In 2018, then-President Donald Trump pulled the United States out of a 2015 deal under which major powers lifted sanctions against Iran in exchange for restrictio­ns on its nuclear activities. After sanctions were re-imposed, Iran expanded those activities far beyond the deal’s limits.

It is now enriching uranium to up to 60 percent purity, close to the roughly 90 percent of weapons grade and far above the deal’s cap of 3.67 percent. Western powers say there is no credible civil explanatio­n for enriching to that level and the IAEA says no country has done so without producing a nuclear bomb.

Iran says its aims are entirely peaceful and it has the right to enrich to high levels for civil purposes.

The United States said Iran should provide the IAEA with cooperatio­n including access “for the purposes of collecting environmen­tal samples ... and it must begin to do so now.”

If it did not, it would ask IAEA chief Rafael Grossi to provide a “comprehens­ive report” on Iran’s nuclear activities more wide-ranging than his regular quarterly ones, it said.

“Then, based on the content of that report, we will take appropriat­e action in support of the IAEA and the global nuclear nonprolife­ration regime,” it added.

Speaking to Reuters after he briefed EU foreign ministers on the subject, the head of the UN’s nuclear watchdog said that while the pace of uranium enrichment had slowed slightly since the end of last year, Iran was still enriching at an elevated rate of around 7 kg of uranium per month to 60 percent purity.

Enrichment to 60 percent brings uranium close to weapons grade, and is not necessary for commercial use in nuclear power production. Iran denies seeking nuclear weapons but no other state has enriched to that level without producing them.

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