San Diego Union-Tribune

IRAN TO MEET WITH U.N. EXPERTS ON URANIUM DISCOVERY

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Iran has agreed to sit down with internatio­nal technical experts investigat­ing the discovery of uranium particles at three former undeclared sites in the country, the head of the U.N. atomic watchdog said Thursday, after months of frustratio­n at Tehran’s lack of a credible explanatio­n.

The agreement came as three of the remaining signatorie­s to the 2015 nuclear deal with Iran — France, Germany and Britain — backed off the idea of a resolution criticizin­g Iran for its decision to start limiting access by Internatio­nal Atomic Energy Agency inspectors to current facilities.

IAEA Director General Rafael Grossi told reporters in Vienna it was not up to him to say whether Iran’s move to hold talks with his technical experts was linked to the decision of the socalled E3 group, but suggested it was difficult to separate the political side of Iran’s nuclear program from the technical side.

“It is obvious for everybody that all these matters need to have some resolution, and when it comes to Iran — and I’m not saying anything that Iran itself hasn’t said — everything is interconne­cted, of course,” he said.

“These are different parts of a single whole.”

The E3 had floated the idea of the resolution after Iran began restrictin­g internatio­nal inspection­s last week. After a last-minute trip to Tehran by Grossi, however, some access was preserved.

Russia and China — the other members of the nuclear deal known as the Joint Comprehens­ive Plan of Action — were reportedly against the resolution, saying it could antagonize Iran further.

Iran’s ambassador to the IAEA, Kazem Gharibabad­i, tweeted after the decision that “wisdom prevails” and that the E3 had prevented unnecessar­y tension.

Iran’s Foreign Ministry applauded the move.

The nuclear deal promised Iran economic incentives in return for the curbs on its nuclear program. President Donald Trump pulled the U.S. out of the deal unilateral­ly in 2018, saying it needed to be renegotiat­ed.

Since then, Iran has slowly violated the restrictio­ns to try to pressure the remaining nations to increase the incentives to offset new, economy-crippling U.S. sanctions.

Before the decision to start limiting IAEA access, it had already begun enriching more uranium than allowed and to a greater purity than permitted, among other things.

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