Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

U.N.: Iran hobbling inspectors

Reduced nuke access called part of pressure campaign

- AMIR VAHDAT, JON GAMBRELL AND DAVID RISING Informatio­n for this article was contribute­d by Zeke Miller of The Associated Press.

TEHRAN, Iran — Iran will begin to offer United Nations inspectors “less access” to its nuclear program as part of its pressure campaign on the West, though investigat­ors will still be able to monitor Tehran’s work, the U.N. atomic watchdog’s chief said Sunday.

Rafael Grossi’s comments came after an emergency trip to Iran in which he said the Internatio­nal Atomic Energy Agency reached a “technical understand­ing” with Tehran to continue to allow monitoring of its nuclear program for up to three months. But his remarks to journalist­s underlined a narrowing window for the U.S. and others to reach terms with Iran, which is already enriching and stockpilin­g uranium at levels far beyond those allowed by its 2015 nuclear deal with world powers.

“The hope of the IAEA has been to stabilize a situation which was very unstable,” Grossi said at the airport after his arrival back in Vienna, where the agency is based. “I think this technical understand­ing does it so that other political consultati­ons at other levels can take place and most importantl­y we can avoid a situation in which we would have been, in practical terms, flying blind.”

Grossi, the Internatio­nal Atomic Energy Agency’s director general, offered few specifics of the agreement he had reached with Iranian leaders. He said the number of inspectors on the ground would remain the same but that “what changes is the type of activity” the agency was able to carry out, without elaboratin­g further.

Iranian Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif, who under President Hassan Rouhani helped reach the atomic accord, said the Internatio­nal Atomic Energy Agency would be prevented from accessing footage from their cameras at nuclear sites.

“This is not a deadline for the world. This is not an ultimatum,” Zarif told the government-run, English-language broadcaste­r Press TV. “This is an internal domestic issue between the parliament and the government.”

“We have a democracy. We are supposed to implement the laws of the country. And the parliament adopted legislatio­n — whether we like it or not.”

Zarif’s comments marked the highest-level acknowledg­ement yet of what Iran planned to do when it stopped following the so-called “Additional Protocol,” a confidenti­al agreement between Tehran and the U.N agency reached as part of the landmark 2015 nuclear deal. The Internatio­nal Atomic Energy Agency has additional protocols with a number of countries it monitors.

Under the protocol with Iran, the agency “collects and analyzes hundreds of thousands of images captured daily by its sophistica­ted surveillan­ce cameras,” the agency said in 2017. The agency also said then that it had placed “2,000 tamper-proof seals on nuclear material and equipment.”

In his interview, Zarif said authoritie­s would be “required by law not to provide the tapes of those cameras.” It wasn’t immediatel­y clear if that also meant the cameras would be turned off entirely as Zarif called that a “technical decision, that’s not a political decision.”

“The IAEA certainly will not get footage from those cameras,” Zarif said.

Grossi didn’t address Zarif’s camera remarks Sunday night, but stressed that European and U.S. leaders needed to salvage the situation through negotiatio­ns.

“What we have agreed is something that is viable. It is useful to bridge this gap,” Grossi said. “It salvages this situation now, but, of course, for a stable, sustainabl­e situation there will have to be a political negotiatio­n and that is not up to me.”

There are 18 nuclear facilities and nine other locations in Iran under Internatio­nal Atomic Energy Agency safeguards.

In 2018, then-President Donald Trump pulled the U.S. unilateral­ly out of the nuclear deal, known as the Joint Comprehens­ive Plan of Action, saying it needed to be renegotiat­ed.

Even as Iran has backed away from restrictio­ns of the deal since then to put pressure on the other signatorie­s — Germany, France, Britain, Russia and China — to provide new economic incentives to offset U.S. sanctions, those countries have insisted it’s critical to keep the deal alive so that inspectors are able to continue to verify Iran’s nuclear activities.

From Washington, U.S. National Security Adviser Jake Sullivan said President Joe Biden remained willing to negotiate with Iran over a return to the nuclear deal, an offer earlier dismissed by Zarif.

“He is prepared to go to the table to talk to the Iranians about how we get strict constraint­s back on their nuclear program,” Sullivan told CBS’s “Face the Nation.”

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