San Diego Union-Tribune (Sunday)

U.N.: IRAN VOWS MORE ACCESS FOR NUCLEAR INSPECTORS

Nation has enriched uranium at higher levels since U.S. left accord

- BY STEPHANIE LIECHTENST­EIN & JOSEPH KRAUSS Liechtenst­ein and Krauss write for The Associated Press.

The head of the U.N.’S nuclear agency said Saturday that Iran pledged to restore cameras and other monitoring equipment at its nuclear sites and to allow more inspection­s at a facility where particles of uranium enriched to near weapons-grade were recently detected.

But a joint statement issued by the Internatio­nal Atomic Energy Agency and Iran’s nuclear body only gave vague assurances that Tehran would address longstandi­ng complaints about the access it gives the watchdog’s inspectors to its disputed nuclear program.

IAEA Director General Rafael Mariano Grossi met with Iranian President Ebrahim Raisi and other top officials in Tehran earlier Saturday.

“Over the past few months, there was a reduction in some of the monitoring activities” related to cameras and other equipment “which were not operating,” Grossi told reporters upon his return to Vienna. “We have agreed that those will be operating again.”

He did not provide details about which equipment would be restored or how soon it would happen, but appeared to be referring to Iran’s removal of surveillan­ce cameras from its nuclear sites in June 2022, during an earlier standoff with the IAEA.

“These are not words. This is very concrete,” Grossi said of the assurances he received in Tehran.

His first visit to Iran in a year came days after the IAEA reported that uranium particles enriched up to 83.7 percent — just short of weapons-grade — were found in Iran’s undergroun­d Fordo nuclear site.

The confidenti­al quarterly report by the nuclear watchdog, which was distribute­d to member nations Tuesday, came as tensions were already high amid months of anti-government protests in Iran and Western anger at its export of attack drones to Russian forces fighting in Ukraine.

The IAEA report said inspectors in January found that two cascades of IR-6 centrifuge­s at Fordo were configured in a way “substantia­lly different” to what Iran had previously declared. That raised concerns that Iran was speeding up its enrichment.

Grossi said the Iranians had agreed to boost inspection­s at the facility by 50 percent. He also confirmed the agency’s findings that there has not been any “production or accumulati­on” of uranium at the higher enrichment level, “which is a very high level.”

Iran has sought to portray any highly enriched uranium particles as a minor byproduct of enriching uranium to 60 percent purity, which it has been doing openly for some time.

Nonprolife­ration experts say Tehran has no civilian use for uranium enriched to even 60 percent. A stockpile of material enriched to 90 percent, the level needed for weapons, could quickly be used to produce an atomic bomb, if Iran chooses.

Iran’s 2015 nuclear deal with world powers limited Tehran’s uranium stockpile and capped enrichment at 3.67 percent — enough to fuel a nuclear power plant. It also barred nuclear enrichment at Fordo, which was built deep inside a mountain in order to withstand aerial attacks.

The U.S. unilateral­ly withdrew from the accord in 2018, reimposing crushing sanctions on Iran, which then began openly breaching the deal’s restrictio­ns. Efforts by the Biden administra­tion, European countries and Iran to negotiate a return to the deal reached an impasse last summer.

 ?? AP ?? Internatio­nal Atomic Energy Organizati­on Director General Rafael Mariano Grossi (left) and Iranian Foreign Minister Hossein Amirabdoll­ahian shake hands before holding talks Saturday.
AP Internatio­nal Atomic Energy Organizati­on Director General Rafael Mariano Grossi (left) and Iranian Foreign Minister Hossein Amirabdoll­ahian shake hands before holding talks Saturday.

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