Grossi: Iran’s boycott is ineffective
The head of the International Atomic Energy Organization said Western sanctions against Iran’s nuclear program are ineffective and that it has grown enormously by finding ways to circumvent them.
“The sanctions do not have functional,” said Rafael Grossi, director general of the International Atomic Energy Agency, in an interview with Bloomberg News. Iran is clearly throwing them away. Iran’s nuclear program – especially from 1 – has grown enormously. “
US President Donald Trump withdrew from his first presidential term of the Joint Action Plan (Brajam), while the International Atomic Energy Organization acknowledged Iran’s commitment to its commitments in the deal.
Bloomberg, pointing out that the International Atomic Energy Organization at the time acknowledged Iran’s commitment to its obligations, quoted Gross: “Since then, Iran’s nuclear program has accelerated.”
In late February, the International Atomic Energy Agency claimed that Iran has increased its enriched uranium reserves nearly by 5 % in three months, and “converting it into fuel needed for a war warhead only a few days.”
However, Bloomberg’s daily agency inspectors work in Iran, saying they can identify any possible deviation in the use of uranium before converting it into weapons.
Grossi claims that, after many US stretches, various factions in Iran are now discussing whether Iran must obtain a nuclear deterrent to ensure its security. However, Iranian leaders have always denied any intention to build any kind of nuclear weapon.
However, Bloomberg writes: “Iran is not the only country that has such concerns … In a world that is becoming more insecure, more countries ask themselves if they also need a nuclear deterrent.”
“A few years ago, the issue of nuclear weapons was a taboo, but now these talks are in place in some countries, which means the constant erosion of norms,” Grossi says.
According to Bloomberg, weapons control experts say the Trump administration’s preference for using threats and economic coercion instead of multilateralism and diplomacy can exacerbate global insecurity and move more countries towards nuclear weapons. In recent years, officials in Germany, Japan, Poland, Saudi Arabia and South Korea have all publicly discussed having a nuclear deterrent.
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