Grossi: The agency has not received any data about Iran’s enriched uranium
The head of the International Atomic Energy Agency claimed that the agency has not received any data from Iran regarding enriched uranium.
According to Isna, the Director General of the International Atomic Energy Agency, Rafael Grossi, claimed in an interview with Ryan News that the agency has not received any data from Iran on the stockpile of enriched uranium or the extent of damage to nuclear facilities after the June attacks.
Asked if the International Atomic Energy Agency had received a report from Iran on the status of its stockpile of enriched uranium or the extent of damage to its nuclear facilities as a result of the June US strikes, he said: “No, we have not.”
Rafael Grossi’s statements against Iran’s nuclear program, which had previously provoked the aggressive attacks of the Zionist regime and the United States on the evening of June 13, are raised in a situation where Iran has put transparency at the forefront of its plans and was targeted in a situation where it was in the middle of indirect consultations with Washington with the mediation of Oman, but the White House betrayed diplomacy.
Aerial bombings and attacks by sabotage groups under the orders of the Zionists and Americans targeted Iran’s nuclear facilities, military commanders, prominent nuclear physicists, and air bases, and killed many Iranian civilians. After the United States officially joined Tel Aviv’s aggressive campaign on the night of June 22 and bombed Iran’s nuclear facilities, Tehran launched missile attacks on the U.S. Al-Adeed Air Base in Qatar on the night of June 23 and imposed peace on the hostile side.
On November 20, the International Atomic Energy Agency’s Board of Governors passed a resolution calling on Iran to immediately report to the agency the status of its stockpiles of enriched uranium and decommissioned nuclear facilities, ignoring Tehran’s cooperation. Reza Najafi, Iran’s permanent representative in international organizations in Vienna, stated that Tehran considers the new resolution of the International Atomic Energy Agency unconstructive and political.
On November 20, Iran officially notified the International Atomic Energy Agency that it was terminating the Cairo agreement with the agency that was signed in September. The Cairo Agreement between Iran and the International Atomic Energy Agency was signed in Egypt in September and outlined the broad outlines of Iran’s cooperation with the international organization, considering attacks on Iran’s nuclear facilities. This decision was taken with the resumption of UN Security Council resolutions on sanctions against Iran. At the same time, Tehran announced its readiness to consider proposals for a new agreement with the International Atomic Energy Agency. The format of cooperation with the agency will be determined by Iran’s Supreme National Security Council.
Despite Grossi’s claims, IAEA staff visited Tehran’s research reactor in the fall, which is being used to develop nuclear medicine, as well as the Bushehr nuclear power plant being built in partnership with Russia, most recently in early November. However, representatives of the International Atomic Energy Agency did not visit the other sites, namely Natanz, Isfahan and Fardo, which were bombed by the United States and Israel during the June war of aggression, and Mohammad Eslami, the vice president and head of the Atomic Energy Organization, said about Rafael Grossi’s recent statements about the start of inspections in Iran: “The fact that under the pressure of Israel, three European countries and the United States are putting pressure on us, it does not affect us; Rather, it is this agency that must be accountable and answer to the world.”
Meanwhile, Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov said in an interview with Iran’s Sada and Sima news agency on Monday that Russia and Iran have discussed the manner and conditions of resuming relations with the International Atomic Energy Agency and Western countries, but the final decision rests with Tehran.
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