The Denver Post

Iran breaches stockpile limit for uranium

- By Jon Gambrell and Amir Vahdat

TEHRAN, IRAN» Iran has broken the limit set on its stockpile of low-enriched uranium by its 2015 nuclear deal with world powers, internatio­nal inspectors and Tehran said Monday, marking its first major departure from the unraveling agreement a year after the U.S. unilateral­ly withdrew from the accord.

The announceme­nt by Iran Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif and later confirmati­on by the U.N. nuclear watchdog puts new pressure on European nations trying to save the deal amid President Donald Trump’s

maximalist campaign targeting Tehran. Iran separately threatens to raise its uranium enrichment closer to weapons-grade levels on July 7 if Europe fails to offer it a new deal.

It also further heightens tensions across the wider Middle East in the wake of Iran recently shooting down a U.S. military surveillan­ce drone, mysterious attacks on oil tankers that America and the Israelis blame on Tehran, and bomb-laden drone assaults by Yemen’s Iranian-backed rebels targeting Saudi Arabia.

The European Union urged Iran to reverse course and Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu called the action “a significan­t step toward making a nuclear weapon.” Iran long has insisted its nuclear program is for peaceful purposes, despite Western fears about it.

Although Trump pulled back from airstrikes targeting Iran after the U.S. drone was shot down, Washington has rushed an aircraft carrier strike group, nuclearcap­able B-52 bombers and thousands of additional troops to the region. That’s raised fears that a miscalcula­tion or further incidents could push the two sides into an armed conflict, some 40 years after the Islamic Revolution and the takeover of the U.S. Embassy in Tehran.

The U.N. nuclear watchdog, the Internatio­nal Atomic Energy Agency, later said its director general had informed officials that it verified Monday that Iran had broken through the limit.

Under terms of the nuclear deal, Iran agreed to have fewer than 300 kilograms of uranium enriched to a maximum of 3.67 percent. Previously, Iran enriched as high as 20 percent, which is a short technical step away from reaching weaponsgra­de levels. It also held up to 22,046 pounds of the higher-enriched uranium.

Neither Zarif nor the U.N. agency said how much uranium Iran now had on hand. Last week, an Iranian official in Vienna said that Tehran was 2.8 kilograms away from the limit. Iran previously announced it had quadrupled its production of low-enriched uranium, which at under 3.67 percent is enough to power a nuclear reactor to create electricit­y, but is far below weapons-grade levels.

However, Iran could have chosen to mix the low-enriched uranium with raw uranium, diluting it and bringing it down under the cap. Pushing past the limit served as a notice to Europe, Zarif said.

Breaking the stockpile limit by itself doesn’t radically change the one year that experts say Iran would need to have enough material for an atomic bomb, if it chooses to pursue one.

But by coupling an increasing stockpile with higher enrichment, it begins to close that one-year window and hamper any diplomatic efforts at saving the accord.

Zarif stressed the country remained on track to raise its enrichment if Europe did not take any additional steps toward saving the accord.

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