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Head of nuclear watchdog: Biden must first focus on reversing Iran’s nuclear progress

An Iranian technician works at a uranium conversion facility in Isfahan, 255 miles south of Tehran | Photo: AP / Vahid Salemi

“I cannot imagine they will simply say, ‘We are back to square one’ because square one is no longer there”, says chief of IAEA that has played an important role in monitoring Iran’s conduct.

Reviving Iran’s nuclear deal under US President-elect Joe Biden would require striking a new agreement setting out how Iran’s breaches should be reversed, the head of the International Atomic Energy Agency chief Rafael Grossi said.

Biden, who takes office on Jan. 20, has said the United States will rejoin the deal “if Iran resumes strict compliance” with the agreement that imposed strict curbs on its nuclear activities in return for the lifting of sanctions.

After President Donald Trump quit the deal and reimposed US sanctions, Iran responded by breaching many of the deal’s restrictions. However according to documents retrieved out of Iran in a daring Israeli heist and publicized by Israel, Iran had been in contravention long before that. Tehran says it could quickly reverse those steps if Washington first lifts its sanctions.

In an interview with Reuters, Grossi, whose agency monitors Iran’s compliance on behalf of the UN, said there had been too many breaches for the agreement to simply snap back into place.

“I cannot imagine that they are going simply to say, ‘We are back to square one’ because square one is no longer there,” Grossi said at IAEA headquarters.

“It is clear that there will have to be a protocol or an agreement or an understanding or some document which will stipulate clearly what we do,” he said.

“There is more (nuclear) material, … there is more activity, there are more centrifuges, and more is coming. So what happens with all this? This is the question for them at the political level to decide.”

Iran’s stockpile of enriched uranium is more than 2.4 tons, 12 times the cap the deal’s limit, though still far below the more than eight tonnes Iran had before signing it. Iran has been enriching uranium up to 4.5% purity, above the deal’s 3.67% limit though below the 20% it had achieved before the deal.

Iran is enriching uranium in places where it is prohibited under the deal, such as at Fordow, a site dug into a mountain. More recently it has started enriching with advanced IR-2 centrifuges at its underground plant at Natanz. The deal says it can use only first-generation IR-1 machines.

“What I see is that we’re moving full circle back to December 2015,” Grossi said. He was referring to the month before the deal’s restrictions took effect, after which large amounts of material and equipment were removed.

“If they want to do it (comply), they could do it pretty fast. But for all of those things we had a charted course,” he said.

(Israel Hayom).

 

 

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