The Punxsutawney Spirit

Iran officially imposes curbs on UN nuclear inspection­s

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TEHRAN, Iran (AP) — Iran officially started restrictin­g internatio­nal inspection­s of its nuclear facilities Tuesday, a bid to pressure European countries and President Joe Biden’s administra­tion to lift crippling economic sanctions and restore the 2015 nuclear deal.

World powers slammed the restrictio­ns as a “dangerous” move.

It came as the Internatio­nal Atomic Energy Agency reported in a confidenti­al document distribute­d to member countries and seen by The Associated Press that Iran had added 38.8 pounds of uranium enriched up to 20 percent to its stockpile as of Feb. 16.

It was the first official confirmati­on of plans Iran announced in January to enrich to the greater purity, which is just a technical step away from weapons-grade levels and far past the 3.67 percent purity allowed under the nuclear deal known as the Joint Comprehens­ive Plan of Action, or JCPOA.

Iran also increased its total enriched uranium stockpile to 6,542.9 pounds, up from 5,385.7 pounds reported on Nov. 2, the IAEA reported.

Iran’s violations of the JCPOA and the move Tuesday to limit internatio­nal inspection­s underscore the daunting task facing Biden as he seeks to reverse former President Donald Trump’s decision to pull the U.S. unilateral­ly out of the deal in 2018. That left Germany, France, Britain, China and Russia struggling to keep it alive.

The JCPOA was the most significan­t pact between Iran and major world powers since its 1979 Islamic revolution, and Germany, France and Britain stressed their commitment Tuesday to preserving it, urging Iran to “stop and reverse all measures that reduce transparen­cy.”

“The E3 are united in underlinin­g the dangerous nature of this decision,” the European powers said in a statement. “It will significan­tly constrain the IAEA’s access to sites and to safeguards-relevant informatio­n.”

Iranian Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif said a new law had gone into effect Tuesday morning, under which Iran will no longer share surveillan­ce footage of its nuclear facilities with the U.N. agency.

“We never gave them live video, but (recordings) were given daily and weekly,” Zarif said of the IAEA’s access to informatio­n recorded by camera monitors. “The tape recording of our (nuclear) program will be kept in Iran.”

The Atomic Energy Organizati­on of Iran, Tehran’s civilian nuclear agency, has promised to preserve the tapes for three months, then hand them over to the IAEA — but only if granted sanctions relief. Otherwise, Iran has vowed to erase the tapes, narrowing the window for a diplomatic breakthrou­gh.

Since Trump pulled the U.S. out of the JCPOA, Iran has gradually been violating its restrictio­ns to put pressures on the remaining nations to come up with economic incentives to offset crippling American sanctions.

Besides surpassing the purity and stockpiles allowed, Iran has also been spinning advanced centrifuge­s and producing uranium metal.

Zarif stressed in a tweet Tuesday that Iran’s new limits on nuclear inspection­s and other violations of the pact are reversible, insisting that the U.S. move first to revive the deal.

In a show of defiance, Cabinet spokesman Ali Rabiei outlined further developmen­ts in Iran’s nuclear program on Tuesday. Over the last three weeks, he told reporters, Iran has installed and started feeding gas into an additional 148 high-tech IR2-m centrifuge­s at its Natanz nuclear enrichment facility and its fortified nuclear complex at Fordo, bringing the total number of centrifuge­s to up to 492. Another set of 492 centrifuge­s will be installed in the coming month, he said.

He added that Iran has installed two cascades of even more advanced centrifuge­s at its nuclear enrichment facilities, but did not specify where.

On Monday, Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei also signaled Iran would refuse to capitulate to U.S. pressure over its nuclear program. Khamenei said that Iran could enrich uranium up to 60 percent purity if necessary, but stressed the country forbids nuclear weapons. Tehran has long insisted that its nuclear program is for peaceful purposes, such as power generation and medical research.

Before the nuclear deal, in 2013, Iran’s stockpile of enriched uranium was already more than 7.72 tons with higher enrichment, but it didn’t pursue a bomb.

The Biden administra­tion has said it’s ready to join talks with Iran and world powers to discuss a return to the deal. Zarif responded to the overture cautiously Tuesday, saying Iran is “assessing the idea of an unofficial meeting” with the parties to the accord “in which America is invited as a non-member.”

In further diplomatic moves, the new U.S. administra­tion rescinded the Trump-imposed U.N. sanctions and eased restrictio­ns on the domestic travel of Iranian diplomats posted to the United Nations.

Rabiei praised the steps on Tuesday but threw cold water on hopes for a swift revival of the deal. “While we consider this as putting America on a constructi­ve path, we see (the steps) as extremely insufficie­nt,” he said.

Before Iran implemente­d its new restrictio­ns on IAEA inspection­s, the agency’s director-general, Rafael Grossi, negotiated a temporary deal during an emergency weekend trip to Tehran. It allowed him to keep the same number of inspectors on the ground.

In the report to members, the IAEA said the understand­ing would enable the agency to continue with its necessary JCPOA verificati­on and monitoring activities for three months.

It added it would also “enable the agency to resume its full verificati­on and monitoring of Iran’s nuclearrel­ated commitment­s under the JCPOA if and when Iran resumes its implementa­tion of those commitment­s.”

The IAEA also said it was still awaiting answers from Iran on three sites where inspection­s had revealed traces of uranium of man-made origin.

 ??  ?? MOHAMMAD ZARIF
MOHAMMAD ZARIF

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