Los Angeles Times

Nuclear deal critics turn focus to IAEA

Skeptics in Congress call for disclosure of the U.N. agency’s confidenti­al accords with Iranian officials.

- By Paul Richter paul.richter@latimes.com

WASHINGTON — Congressio­nal critics of the nuclear deal with Iran have opened a new front in their battle with the Obama administra­tion, demanding the release of secret details of Iran’s agreement with the United Nations’ nuclear agency.

The side agreements between Iran and the Internatio­nal Atomic Energy Agency are fatally weak, the critics say.

The IAEA has worked out the agreements in an effort to resolve its investigat­ion of how much research on nuclear weapons Iran has conducted. Under standard IAEA procedures, such agreements are kept secret.

One of the agreements lays out specific steps the IAEA wants Iran to take to help answer its long-standing questions about Iran’s suspected past military work.

The other details how the IAEA and Iran will gather informatio­n from the Parchin military base, where important parts of the research are believed to have taken place.

Skeptical lawmakers contend that the IAEA has agreed that its inspectors don’t need to enter the topsecret Parchin base, but can rely on Iranian officials to take environmen­tal samples that the IAEA would then test to determine whether Iran conducted illicit weapons research.

Lawmakers have expressed outrage over this purported agreement. Sen. Robert Menendez (D-N.J.), a critic of the administra­tion’s negotiatio­ns with Iran, said at a Senate hearing that it was “the equivalent of the fox guarding the chicken coop.”

The IAEA’s investigat­ion of the “possible military dimension” of Iran’s nuclear program has been stalemated for years. But with Iran now pledging increased cooperatio­n, the IAEA is trying to conclude the inquiry by December.

Lawmakers of both parties are pressing for disclosure of the two agreements. Sen. Bob Corker (RTenn.), chairman of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, is warning that unless the administra­tion discloses the details, he may seek to increase the amount of time Congress will take to consider its response to the deal.

Administra­tion officials contend that the agreements the IAEA has made with Iran are properly confidenti­al. Under long-standing IAEA procedures, agreements between the IAEA and a country under investigat­ion remain private to encourage countries to cooperate.

“These kinds of technical arrangemen­ts with the IAEA are a matter of standard practice, and they’re not released publicly or to other states,” John Kirby, chief State Department spokesman, said last week. But he said that administra­tion experts “are familiar and comfortabl­e with the contents” and willing to discuss them with Congress in a classified setting.

Mark Dubowitz of the Foundation for the Defense of Democracie­s, an opponent of the deal, said the agreement on Parchin would set a dangerous precedent that would encourage countries to demand that they be able to conduct their own investigat­ive tests for the agency.

Kelsey Davenport of the Arms Control Assn., which favors the deal, said the dangerous precedent would be set if the agency broke confidenti­ality rules and disclosed details of its agreement. Such a step would make countries reluctant to cooperate with investigat­ions, she said.

Secretary of State John F. Kerry, asked about the Parchin agreement at the Senate hearing, appeared to be hinting that the lawmakers were seeking to make public details they had learned in closed session.

“It’s supposed to be discussed in a classified setting,” Kerry told Menendez at the hearing on Thursday. “I’m not confirming how it’s happening. I’m simply saying that we’re confident the IAEA has the ability to be able to get the answers they need.”

Corker said the arrangemen­t was like asking profession­al athletes to “mail in their own urine samples.”

 ?? Brendan Smialowski AFP/Getty Images ?? SECRETARY OF STATE John Kerry, speaking of the Parchin agreement Thursday during a hearing of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, said, “It’s supposed to be discussed in a classified setting.”
Brendan Smialowski AFP/Getty Images SECRETARY OF STATE John Kerry, speaking of the Parchin agreement Thursday during a hearing of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, said, “It’s supposed to be discussed in a classified setting.”

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