Albuquerque Journal

Iran vows to ‘soon’ breach uranium stockpile limits

Iran would be closer to a nuclear weapon

- BY LOVEDAY MORRIS

MANAMA, Bahrain — European efforts to persuade Iran to stick within the limits of the nuclear deal have been insufficie­nt, and the country will breach uranium stockpile limits “soon,” Tehran’s semioffici­al Fars News Agency reported Saturday, a move that could further escalate tensions with the United States.

Iran has been threatenin­g to surpass the limit of 660 pounds of low-enriched uranium that the country is allowed to possess under the nuclear agreement, unless it receives the sanctions relief that the deal promised in return.

Breaching the limit would be a symbolic move but would not put Iran significan­tly closer to building a nuclear weapon. The 300-kilogram limit of uranium enriched to 3.67% is suitable for use in power plants but falls far short of the more than 90% enriched uranium needed for fissile material in a nuclear bomb.

The move would come against the backdrop of knife-edge tensions in the region, with President Donald Trump last week saying he had been close to launching a strike on Iran after its forces shot down a U.S. surveillan­ce drone in the Strait of Hormuz. The United States has also accused Iran of using magnetic limpet mines to attack petrochemi­cal tankers in the Gulf of Oman — which Tehran denies.

The U.S. Air Force said Friday that it had deployed its most advanced fighter jet, the F-22 Raptor, to the region for the first time to “defend American forces and interests.” It published pictures of the planes landing at Al Udeid Air Base in Qatar a day earlier.

The United States last year pulled out of the Obama-era nuclear agreement between Tehran and six world powers. Trump, who describes the deal as “rotten,” has since reinstated all sanctions and introduced more, crippling Iran’s economy.

The remaining signatorie­s have attempted to keep the deal alive. But Iran has said that it should no longer be constraine­d by the terms of the agreement, because it cannot reap any of the benefits as long as internatio­nal firms worry about violating U.S. sanctions.

European countries say the deal is essential to regional security. Britain, France and Germany have scrambled to launch a complicate­d barter system in an effort to enable European companies to continue trading with Iran and persuade it to abide by the deal. After a meeting of the remaining signatorie­s Friday in Vienna, the European Union announced that the barter system was operationa­l. Iran had initially welcomed that move as a “positive step” that it would “study.”

On Saturday, an unnamed “informed source” quoted by Fars indicated that the European system had fallen short.

The effort “failed to meet our demands,” the official said. “Iran is determined to cut its commitment­s to the deal and the 300-kg enriched uranium limit will be soon breached.”

However, Iran’s official news agency, IRNA, did not carry similar statements. An article published by Tasnim, a news outlet close to Iranian hard-liners, questioned whether Iranian President Hassan Rouhani would “fall for the European lollipop again.”

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