Asking for ‘concrete measures’ on nuke facilities - GulfToday

Asking for ‘concrete measures’ on nuke facilities

Iran Nuclear

There is a deep suspicion in the West that Iran is set to enrich the uranium to weapons-grade and be in a position to make several nuclear bombs.

Rafael Grossi, Director-General of the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA), urged Iran on Tuesday that it take “concrete” steps to improve ties between the UN nuclear watchdog and Iran. Grossi said, “What we are looking at is concrete measures that could make this [deal] operational.” He said that Iran could take “very practical and tangible measures that can be implemented in order to accelerate.”

Last September, Iran withdrew accreditation of the IAEA inspectors. In October, IAEA submitted a report saying that Iran possessed three times the enriched uranium that was permissible in the 2015 deal made with the United States and other European powers including France and Germany, apart from Russia and the United Kingdom. Grossi was in Isfahan to attend an international science conference hosted by Iran, where its civilian nuclear facility in Natanz near Isfahan is located. Atomic Energy Organisation (AEO) of Iran head Mohammad Eslami said at the joint press conference with Grossi in Isfahan, “We continue interactions over unresolved issues. The important point is that Mr. Grossi takes the necessary actions to settle the problems that are mainly political.”

When Donald Trump became president of the US in 2016, he pulled out of the nuclear cooperation deal signed with Iran under President Barack Obama. Ever since the return of Joe Biden in 2021, efforts had been on to revive the deal. Israel has been opposing the deal tooth and nail. The attempt of the IAEA is to restore the inspector regime with Iran’s nuclear facilities. There is a deep suspicion in the West that Iran is set to enrich the uranium to weapons-grade and be in a position to make several nuclear bombs.

Iran denies that it intends to make nuclear weapons and insists that its nuclear programme is for peaceful pursuits. At the first international conference on Nuclear Science and Technology held at Isfahan, Eslami said that Iran was ready to share the nuclear technology with other countries.

The liberal moderates in Europe and the US believe that it is better to deal with Iran directly and keep its nuclear programme within the range of the IAEA inspectors, instead of keeping it out which could be more dangerous. There are hardliners in the West, and Trump is only an extreme example, who think that Iran should not be given any leeway, and that Tehran must keep its nuclear facilities open to full inspection of international teams. Iran considers this a challenge to its sovereignty. The 2015 deal was a compromise, where the West’s economic sanctions against Iran are withdrawn in return for Iran’s cooperation. But equations between Iran and the West have always been volatile, and each side feels provoked by the other.

The IAEA has been trying to tread a balanced line between the two sides, though many believe that the UN nuclear watchdog was under the influence of Western powers, and that it was not a neutral body which it should have been. What is lacking between Iran and the West, and Iran and IAEA, is trust. There is a huge trust deficit, which is very unfortunate.

But the efforts of IAEA chief Grossi to keep the tenuous ties between the two sides is laudable. Iran has also been trying to be open to the overtures of the UN body. But there is little that the IAEA can do to deal with the present deadlock. The Americans and the Iranians have to speak directly to each other to resolve the differences. The back channels between the two sides have always been open, and it is a breakthrough here that will be reflected in the official stances of the two sides.

 


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Majority of US voters support the deal with Iran

US presidential candidate Joe Biden promised to return to the 2015 agreement limiting Iran’s nuclear programme in exchange for lifting sanctions. Instead, President Biden sticks to the dangerous and destructive policy dictated by Donald Trump who withdrew from the deal in 2018 and slapped 1,500 punitive sanctions on Iran.

Biden hesitates although 54 per cent of registered US voters support a deal while only 20 per cent oppose; among Biden’s Democrats the number is 70 per cent backers and six per cent opponents; among independents 50 per cent support and 30 per cent do not; and 41 per cent of Republicans are in favour against 35 who are not.

Since Biden’s own positive rating is currently a low 41 per cent against 56 per cent negative rating, it would seem it would behove him to re-enter the deal. The main obstacle is Tehran’s insistence that the US must lift Trump’s designation of Iran’s Revolutionary Guard (IRG) as a “foreign terrorist organisation,” making the IRG the world’s sole national army to join a host of armed non-state actors.

The text, a somewhat amended version of the original document, has been ready for months and awaits finalisation. Why then is Biden procrastinating and prevaricating? He faces stiff opposition from domestic anti-Iran lobbyists and legislators and Israel where the government rejects the deal. In both countries military and intelligence experts are, however, in favour. They hold, correctly, that Tehran has made great strides in developing both nuclear expertise and output since Trump pulled out, prompting Iran to gradually reduce its adherence in retaliation.

Instead of being limited to 3.67 uranium enrichment Iran has 43 kilograms of 60 per cent enriched uranium: this is a few steps away from the 90 per cent needed for a bomb. Instead of having a 300 kilogram stockpile of 3.67 enriched uranium, Iran has a stock 18 times larger of uranium enriched above the 3.67 per cent level permitted. Instead of carrying out enrichment with old, approved centrifuges, Iran has employed advanced centrifuges.

Instead of abiding by the stringent monitoring regime put in place by the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA), Iran has been slipping surveillance. Until Iran began to breach the regulatory regime, it was the toughest on earth.

Nevertheless, Iran has pledged to revert to the deal once the US re-enters and to halt enrichment above 3.67 per cent, export all but 300 kilogrammes of the permitted 3.67 per cent of material in its stockpile, revert to old centrifuges which have been warehoused, and re-engage fully with the IAEA monitoring effort.

Opponents of the deal argue its “sunset clauses” will expire by 2031, thereby ending restrictions on Iran’s nuclear activities. This may be addressed in the new deal.

However, they also contend it fails to curb in Iran’s ballistic missile programme and sup- port for Lebanon’s Hizbollah, Yemeni Houthi rebels, Iraqi Shia militias and the Syrian government.

Since these issues are outside the purview of the 2015 deal, Iran rightly rejects including them in its successor. Tehran has also made it clear that they can be discussed directly with the US once Biden re-joins the deal and sanctions are lifted.

After months of trying to get the external issues incorporated into the nuclear deal, the Biden administration conceded that this is impossible.

On April 29th this year, Secretary of State Antony Blinken told lawmakers that the Trump administration’s “maximum pressure” campaign had failed and “produced a more dangerous nuclear programme” while Iran stepped up involvement in regional affairs. These post-Ukraine war remarks suggested that the Biden administration was ready to return to the deal.

However, the administration continues to blow hot at one moment and cold another. Last week Washington may have blown up the deal. At the 35-member IAEA board of governors meeting in Vienna the US — along with acolytes Britain, France, and Germany — secured the adoption of a resolution critical of Iran over its inability or refusal to account for traces of nuclear material at three undeclared sites found by IAEA monitors in 2019 and 2020.

The resolution, which received 30 votes in favour — with Iran and Russia voting against and India, China and Libya abstaining — urges Iran to co-operate “without delay” with inspectors after IAEA director Rafael Grossi reported he had not received a “technically credible” explanation for the presence of particles.

Atomic Energy Organisation of Iran spokesman Behrouz Kamalvandi pointed out that uranium “contamination” was possible “in a country as vast as Iran.” He also suggested “human sabotage” by Israel which is blamed for repeated attacks on Iranian nuclear sites and assassinations of Iranian scientists.

Iranian officials are suspicious due to the fact that former Israeli Prime Minister Bin- yamin Netanyahu instigated visits by IAEA inspectors to one of the three contaminate sites at the village of Turquzabad near Tehran. IAEA monitors took soil samples and concluded that there were “traces of radioactive material” at the location which may have been used for storage as there were no signs of processing. How did Netanyahu know there were samples at this site?

Although the IAEA still has more than 40 cameras which will continue to operate at Iran’s enrichment facilities, Grossi stated Tehran’s action mounted to a “serious challenge.” He warned that in three or four weeks the agency would be unable to provide “continuity of knowledge” about Iran’s activities. “This could be a fatal blow” to negotiations over the nuclear deal, he stated.

He also warned that Iran is “just a few weeks” away from having enough enriched uranium to build a nuclear bomb. However, Iran halted work on weaponisation in 2003 and supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei has repeatedly stated that Iran will not manufacture nuclear weapons as they are prohibited by Islam.

Kelsey Davenport of the “independent” Washington-based Arms Control Association told the BBC that in ten days or less Iran could transform its current stock of 60 per cent enriched uranium into the 90 per cent required for weapons. She said, however, that manufacturing bombs would require one or two years.

If Biden continues dithering the deal could die, further destabilising an already unstable region.

Michael Jansen, Political Correspondent

12 Jun 2022