Yahoo – AFP,
Simon STURDEE, August 31, 2017
Vienna (AFP) - Iran remains in compliance with the 2015 nuclear deal, a UN atomic watchdog report showed Thursday, even as growing tensions between Tehran and Washington threaten to torpedo the landmark agreement.
Vienna (AFP) - Iran remains in compliance with the 2015 nuclear deal, a UN atomic watchdog report showed Thursday, even as growing tensions between Tehran and Washington threaten to torpedo the landmark agreement.
US
President Donald Trump has vowed to "dismantle" the
"disastrous" accord between Iran and six major powers curtailing
Tehran's atomic activities in exchange for sanctions relief.
While US
sanctions imposed over Iran's nuclear work remain suspended, Washington has
ramped up others related to Tehran's support for "terrorism", its
ballistic missile programme and its human rights record.
Iran says
this contravenes the "spirit" of the deal, an accusation fired back
by Trump at Tehran because of the Islamic republic's funding and supplying of
armed groups "across the region".
The 2015
accord covered only Iran's nuclear activities and the new International Atomic
Energy Agency (IAEA) quarterly report, seen by AFP, showed that these remained
in compliance.
Iran's
stock of low-enriched uranium -- used for peaceful purposes, but when further
processed for a weapon -- did not exceed the agreed limit of 300 kilogrammes
(661 pounds), the report said.
It added
that Iran "has not pursued the construction of the Arak... reactor"
-- which could give it weapons-grade plutonium -- and has not enriched uranium
above low purity levels.
The number
of enrichment centrifuges also remained as agreed, while Iran's store of heavy
water, a reactor coolant, was 111.0 tonnes after it exported 19.1 tonnes to an
unnamed country.
Iran has
previously inched above an agreed ceiling of 130 tonnes. The plant producing
the heavy water was shut for maintenance earlier this year and has now
restarted, the IAEA said.
Military
sites
Trump is
due in October to certify to Congress whether Iran is sticking to the nuclear
deal. In July he told the Wall Street Journal he "would be surprised if
they were in compliance".
The
Guardian this week cited former officials and analysts as saying that US
intelligence is under pressure from the White House to produce a justification
to declare Iran in violation.
Last week
Trump despatched his UN envoy Nikki Haley to Vienna. The visit was widely seen
as aimed at getting IAEA chief Yukiya Amano to seek access to military sites in
Iran.
Such
inspections would sallow investigation into whether Iran is conducting research
activities or developing equipment -- banned under the deal -- that might be
related to making a nuclear weapon.
The IAEA is
not thought to have requested any such visits, likely meaning that it has not
seen or been given any information suggesting that any such activity has taken
place.
Iran's
President Hassan Rouhani on Tuesday dismissed the idea of inspections at its
military sites.
"Our
commitments to the world are clear... our relations with the IAEA are defined
by rules, not by the US," Rouhani said in a televised address.
As well as
the United States the hard-fought agreement also includes China, Russia, Britain,
France and Germany. French President Emmanuel Macron said on Tuesday there is
"no alternative" to the deal.
Tehran has
warned that if the deal falls apart it can ramp up its atomic programme again
within days, giving Trump a second nuclear crisis to add to the standoff over
North Korea.

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