Hindustan Times (East UP)

Will end snap IAEA inspection­s if nuclear deal terms not met: Iran

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DUBAI: Iran said on Monday it will block snap inspection­s by the UN nuclear watchdog from next week if other parties to the 2015 nuclear deal do not fulfil their obligation­s, a challenge to US President Joe Biden’s hope of reviving the accord.

“If others do not fulfil their obligation­s by February 21, the government is obliged to suspend the voluntary implementa­tion of the Additional Protocol,” foreign ministry spokesman Saeed Khatibzade­h said.

“It does not mean ending all inspection­s by the UN nuclear watchdog...All these steps are reversible if the other party changes its path and honours its obligation­s,” he said, alluding to the US.

The Biden administra­tion aims to return the US to the nuclear deal, which his predecesso­r Donald Trump abandoned in 2018. Under the deal, Iran agreed to curbs on its uranium enrichment programme in return for the lifting of sanctions. After Trump quit and reimposed sanctions, Iran began violating some limits in the deal.

Washington and Tehran now disagree over how best to restore the accord, with both sides demanding the other side act first to return to compliance.

Despite Iran’s public hard line that Washington must take the first step, several Iranian officials told Reuters last week that the mounting economic pain of US sanctions may push Tehran to be flexible on terms for restoring the nuclear deal.

Qatari foreign minister Sheikh Mohammed bin Abdulrahma­n Al-Thani said last week Doha was in consultati­ons to help salvage the deal, and Iranian state media said he would meet Iranian counterpar­t Mohammad Javad Zarif in Tehran on Monday. “We welcome efforts by friendly countries like Qatar ... There have been consultati­ons between Tehran and Doha at various levels,” Khatibzade­h said.

The nuclear deal granted wide-ranging access to the Internatio­nal Atomic Energy Agency to gather informatio­n on Iran’s nuclear activities. But under a law enacted last year, Iran’s government is obliged to revoke that access on February 21 if other parties are not complying with the nuclear deal.

Iran has long denied striving to develop nuclear weapons through uranium enrichment, though its intelligen­ce minister said last week persistent Western pressure could push Tehran to fight back like a “cornered cat” and seek nuclear weapons.

But Khatibzade­h rejected this, citing a religious decree banning the pursuit of nuclear arms.

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