Khaleej Times

Iran starts enriching uranium to 60%, its highest level ever

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Iran said on Friday it has begun producing uranium at 60 per cent purity, in another breach of its commitment­s to the internatio­nal community which is concerned about its nuclear programme.

Iran had declared it would sharply ramp up its enrichment of uranium on Tuesday, two days after an attack on its Natanz nuclear facility that it blamed on Israel.

The announceme­nt cast a shadow over talks in Vienna aimed at salvaging the 2015 nuclear deal between Iran and world powers that then US president Donald Trump abandoned almost three years ago.

Ali Akbar Salehi, head of the Atomic Energy Organisati­on of Iran, on Friday confirmed the country was now producing uranium enriched to 60 per cent purity. “The enrichment of uranium to 60 per cent is underway at the Martyr Ahmadi Roshan nuclear facility” in Natanz, he said, quoted by Tasnim news agency.

“We are now getting nine grammes (almost a third of an ounce) per hour,” Salehi said later on state television.

While production was underway, scientists at Natanz were still working on how to install the two centrifuge lines Iran said would be dedicated to 60 per cent enrichment operations, Salehi said.

He added that could see Iran’s production of 60 per cent enriched uranium fall to six grammes an hour, but added that it would continue to make 20 per cent enriched uranium on the same two lines. The move to enrich uranium to 60 per cent purity takes Iran closer to the 90 per cent level required for use in a nuclear weapon.

The Islamic republic has gradually rolled back its nuclear commitment­s since 2019, a year after the US withdrew from the accord and began imposing sanctions. The 2015 deal known formally as the Joint Comprehens­ive Plan of Action, or JCPOA, gave Iran relief from sanctions in return for curbs on its nuclear programme.

Under the accord, Iran had committed to keep enrichment to 3.67 per cent, though it had stepped this up to 20 per cent in January.

Negotiatio­ns aimed at ensuring the return of the United States to the JCPOA and the lifting of sanctions resumed this week in Vienna. Russia’s ambassador to the UN in Vienna, Mikhail Ulyanov, tweeted after the latest round of talks on Thursday that the “general impression is positive”.

The head of the Iranian delegation, Abbas Araghchi, was more cautious at the end of the meeting.

Araghchi stressed Iran wanted to avoid the talks “dragging on” and that they had to “take place in a welldefine­d framework and within an acceptable time period”. He also stated that the planned rise in enrichment levels was in order to “meet some of the country’s medical needs”.

The European Union has rejected this argument, with its external affairs spokespers­on Peter Stano saying there was “no credible or plausible civilian justificat­ion” for the move.

The talks involved delegation­s

from the remaining parties to the JCPOA following the US pullout — Britain, China, France, Germany and Russia as well as Iran.

Britain, France and Germany had expressed “grave concern” over Iran’s latest enrichment move.

Iran says the step is a response to Israel’s “nuclear terrorism” after an explosion knocked out power at its Natanz enrichment plant on Sunday.

Israel has neither confirmed nor denied involvemen­t, but public radio reports in the country said it was a sabotage operation by the Mossad spy agency, citing unnamed intelligen­ce sources. —

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