Houston Chronicle

U.N. to let Iran inspect alleged nuke work site

- By George Jahn

VIENNA — Iran will be allowed to use its own inspectors to investigat­e a site it has been accused of using to develop nuclear arms, operating under a secret agreement with the U.N. agency that normally carries out such work, according to a document seen by the Associated Press.

The revelation on Wednesday newly riled Republican lawmakers in the U.S. who have been severely critical of a broader agreement to limit Iran’s future nuclear programs, signed by the Obama administra­tion, Iran and five world powers in July.

Those critics have complained that the wider deal is unwisely built on trust of the Iranians, while the administra­tion has insisted it depends on reliable inspection­s.

House Speaker John Boehner said, “President Obama boasts his deal includes ‘unpreceden­ted verificati­on.’ He claims it’s not built on trust. But the administra­tion’s briefings on these side deals have been totally insufficie­nt — and it still isn’t clear whether anyone at the White House has seen the final documents.”

Said House Foreign Affairs Committee Chairman Ed Royce: “Internatio­nal inspection­s should be done by internatio­nal inspectors. Period.”

The newly disclosed side agreement, for an investigat­ion of the Parchin nuclear site by the U.N.’s Internatio­nal Atomic Energy Agency, is linked to persistent allegation­s that Iran has worked on atomic weapons. That investigat­ion is part of the overarchin­g nuclear-limits deal.

Evidence of the inspection­s concession is sure to increase pressure from U.S. congressio­nal opponents before a Senate vote of disapprova­l on the overall agreement in early September. If the resolution passes and President Barack Obama vetoes it, opponents would need a two-thirds majority to override it. Even Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, a Republican, has suggested opponents will likely lose a veto fight, though that was before Wednesday’s disclosure.

‘Deep-seated concerns’

John Cornyn of Texas, the second-ranking Republican senator, said, “Trusting Iran to inspect its own nuclear site and report to the U.N. in an open and transparen­t way is remarkably naive and incredibly reckless. This revelation only reinforces the deep-seated concerns the American people have about the agreement.”

The Parchin agreement was worked out between the IAEA and Iran. The United States and the five other world powers were not party to it but were briefed by the IAEA and endorsed it as part of the larger package.

On Wednesday, White House National Security Council spokesman Ned Price said the Obama administra­tion was “confident in the agency’s technical plans for investigat­ing the possible military dimensions of Iran’s former program. … The IAEA has separately developed the most robust inspection regime ever peacefully negotiated.”

All IAEA member countries must give the agency some insight into their nuclear programs. Some are required to do no more than give a yearly accounting of the nuclear material they possess. But nations— like Iran — suspected of possible proliferat­ion are under greater scrutiny that can include stringent inspection­s.

The agreement in question diverges from normal procedures by allowing Tehran to employ its own experts and equipment in the search for evidence of activities it has consistent­ly denied — trying to develop nuclear weapons.

The White House has repeatedly denied claims of a secret side deal favorable to Tehran. IAEA chief Yukiya Amano told Republican senators last week that he was obligated to keep the document confidenti­al.

Iran has refused access to Parchin for years and has denied any interest in — or work on — nuclear weapons. Based on U.S., Israeli and other intelligen­ce and its own research, the IAEA suspects that the Islamic Republic may have experiment­ed with high-explosive detonators for nuclear arms.

The IAEA has cited evidence, based on satellite images, of possible attempts to sanitize the site since the alleged work stopped more than a decade ago.

The document seen by the AP is a draft that one official familiar with its contents said doesn’t differ substantia­lly from the final version. He demanded anonymity because he wasn’t authorized to discuss the issue in public.

‘Separate arrangment II’

The document is labeled “separate arrangemen­t II,” indicating there is another confidenti­al agreement between Iran and the IAEA governing the agency’s probe of the nuclear weapons allegation­s.

Iran is to provide agency experts with photos and videos of locations the IAEA says are linked to the alleged weapons work, “taking into account military concerns.”

That wording suggests that — beyond being barred from physically visiting the site — the agency won’t get photo or video informatio­n from areas Iran says are offlimits because they have military significan­ce.

While the document says the IAEA “will ensure the technical authentici­ty” of Iran’s inspection, it does not say how.

The draft is unsigned but the proposed signatory for Iran is listed as Ali Hoseini Tash, deputy secretary of the Supreme National Security Council for Strategic Affairs. That reflects the significan­ce Tehran attaches to the agreement.

The main focus of the July 14 deal between Iran and six world powers is curbing Iran’s present nuclear program that could be used to make weapons. But a subsidiary element obligates Tehran to cooperate with the IAEA in its probe of the past allegation­s.

The investigat­ion has been essentiall­y deadlocked for years, with Tehran asserting the allegation­s are based on false intelligen­ce from the U.S., Israel and other adversarie­s. But Iran and the U.N. agency agreed last month to wrap up the investigat­ion by December, when the IAEA plans to issue a final assessment.

That assessment is unlikely to be unequivoca­l.

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