US, Iran clash over wider inspections
The US and Iran quarrelled over how Tehran’s nuclear activities should be policed at a meeting of the UN nuclear watchdog on Monday, in a row sparked last month by Washington’s call for wider inspections.
Key US allies are worried by the possibility of Washington pulling out of a 2015 landmark nuclear deal under which Iran agreed to curb its nuclear programme in exchange for sanctions against it being lifted.
The US ambassador to the UN, Nikki Haley, last month called for the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) to inspect a wider range of sites in Iran, including military ones, to verify it was not breaching its nuclear deal with world powers. Her remarks were rejected by a furious Tehran.
“We will not accept a weakly enforced or inadequately monitored deal,” US Energy Secretary Rick Perry told the IAEA general conference, an annual meeting of the agency’s member states that began on Monday.
He did not say whether he thought the deal was currently weakly enforced.
“The US ... strongly encourages the IAEA to exercise its full authorities to verify Iran’s adherence to each and every nuclear-related commitment under the JCPOA,” Perry added, referring to the deal by its official name — the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action.
Perry was speaking shortly after the general conference formally approved the appointment of Yukiya Amano, a 70year-old career diplomat from Japan, to a third term as IAEA director-general.
US President Donald Trump has called the accord “the worst deal ever negotiated” and has until mid-October to make a decision that could lead to reimposed US sanctions on Iran.
Iran’s nuclear chief, Ali Akbar Salehi, told the meeting in Vienna that Washington had made “a host of unjustifiable peculiar demands with regard to the verification of our strictly peaceful nuclear programme”.
“We remain confident that the [IAEA] will resist such unacceptable demands and continue to execute the agency’s ... role with strict objectivity, fairness and impartiality,” he said, also criticising the US’s “overtly hostile attitude”