USA TODAY International Edition

Fact check: Trump on ‘multiple violations’

He says Tehran broke pact, but atomic agency disagrees

- Eugene Kiely FactCheck.org

In refusing to certify the Iran nuclear deal, President Trump said Iran “has committed multiple violations of the agreement.” But that’s not the finding of the Internatio­nal Atomic Energy Agency.

The IAEA has issued eight reports since the agreement was implemente­d in January 2016, and all eight — most recently Aug. 31 — have found Iran is implementi­ng the agreement.

Trump himself has certified to Congress on two occasions that Iran has complied with the nuclear deal known as the Joint Comprehens­ive Plan of Action. The president must issue a certificat­ion every 90 days.

On Friday, Trump announced he would not once again certify Iran’s compliance with the JCPOA. His decision “gives Congress the option to introduce legislatio­n reimposing U.S. sanctions waived or suspended under the JCPOA on an expedited schedule,” the Arms Control Associatio­n says.

Trump said Iran committed “multiple violations” of the JCPOA, which was negotiated by the U.S., China, France, Germany, Russia and the United Kingdom, as well as representa­tives of the European Union and Iran.

uTrump on Friday: Iranian regime has committed multiple violations of the agreement. For example, on two separate occasions, they have exceeded the limit of 130 metric tons of heavy water. Until recently, the Iranian regime has also failed to meet our expectatio­ns in its operation of advanced centrifuge­s.The Iranian regime has also intimidate­d internatio­nal inspectors into not using the full inspection authoritie­s that the agreement calls for. Iranian officials and military leaders have repeatedly claimed they will not allow inspectors onto military sites, even though the

The issue is whether Iran has complied, and even those within Trump’s own administra­tion have said Iran is in compliance.

internatio­nal community suspects some of those sites were part of Iran’s clandestin­e nuclear weapons program.

Let’s take a look at each of the three issues Trump raised.

Under the agreement, Iran is limited to 130 metric tons of heavy water — which is a concern to nuclear arms inspectors, as the Associated Press reported, because it is “used to cool reactors that can produce substantia­l amounts of plutonium,” which “can be applied to making the fissile core of nuclear warheads.”

On two occasions, Iran has slightly exceeded the limits. The first time was in February 2016, a month after the agreement was implemente­d, and again in November. So Trump is right, although he was aware of these violations when he agreed twice before to certify Iran’s compliance.

Iran also is now in compliance with the heavy water limits, according to the eighth and most recent IAEA report.

“Iran exceeded the heavy water limits briefly but is now in compliance,” Daryl G. Kimball, executive director of the Arms Control Associatio­n, said in an email. “It is important to note that the heavy water is now useless for Iran given that its heavy water reactor at Arak has been reconfigur­ed so that it cannot produce plutonium.”

Iran filled the core of the heavy-water reactor at Arak with concrete in January 2016.

Kelsey Davenport, director for nonprolife­ration policy at the Arms Control Associatio­n, said there was a misunderst­anding about the 130 metric tons.

Iran “interprete­d language in the deal setting the cap differentl­y than” the other countries, believing that the “130-ton limit was an estimate, not a hard cap.” But that difference has been resolved, and there have been no violations since.

As for Trump’s concern about advanced centrifuge­s, David Albright, an IAEA weapons inspector in Iraq during the 1990s and founder of the Institute for Science and Internatio­nal Security, said that issue has been resolved.

“The issue is the number of advanced centrifuge­s Iran had,” Albright said. “I would call it a violation that has been corrected, inadverten­tly I would add. The extra ones broke.”

Trump’s reference to inspection­s at military sites refers to Section T of JCPOA that covers the developmen­t of dual-use equipment that has civilian and military applicatio­ns, according to Albright, an adviser to the Trump administra­tion. Albright said the IAEA needs access to military sites in order to verify Iran’s compliance with Section T of the agreement.

Under the JCPOA, the IAEA has daily access to declared nuclear sites for 15 years and continuous electronic monitoring of those sites for at least 15 years, as explained in a guidebook published by the Belfer Center for Science and Internatio­nal Affairs at Harvard University. There is a separate, confidenti­al agreement covering the Parchin military site, which has been the site of past activity that the IAEA has suspected was connected to nuclear weapons developmen­t. Critics have claimed that agreement amounts to self-inspection­s, a claim the IAEA has denied.

“This is the most egregious of Trump’s claims,” said Davenport, of the Arms Control Associatio­n. “The IAEA clearly stated that Iran has granted inspectors all of the access the agency has requested. If Iran had blocked access, the P5+1, including the United States, would not have been able to say that Iran is complying with the accord.”

In a statement in response to Trump’s speech, IAEA Director General Yukiya Amano said that “the IAEA has had access to all locations it needed to visit.”

Albright, who agrees with the president that Iran is “not in full compliance,” said the IAEA has not asked for access to the military sites for fear it would “bring down the entire deal.”

“The IAEA can ask to go, and if Iran refuses, the JCPOA contains a mechanism to allow one party to snap back all sanctions,” Albright said. “But the IAEA is not likely to want to bring down the entire deal by asking to go to a military site.”

We take no position on Trump’s desire to renegotiat­e aspects of the Iran deal he does not like. The issue, though, is whether Iran has complied with the existing agreement, and even those within his own administra­tion have said Iran is in compliance.

In September, Secretary of State Rex Tillerson said Iran is in “technical compliance” with the deal, and Gen. Joseph Dunford, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, told Congress that “Iran is adhering to its JCPOA obligation­s,” and the agreement is working as intended.

 ?? BRENDAN SMIALOWSKI, AFP/GETTY IMAGES ?? President Trump speaks about the Iran deal in the White House’s Diplomatic Reception room Friday.
BRENDAN SMIALOWSKI, AFP/GETTY IMAGES President Trump speaks about the Iran deal in the White House’s Diplomatic Reception room Friday.

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