Iran Tension Is Set to Rise After Inspectors Lay Bare Violations

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A bleak assessment of Iran’s nuclear transparency cast a pall over months of hard-fought diplomacy aimed at restoring its landmark atomic accord with world powers that has broad implications for Middle Eastern security, global business and oil markets.

A bleak assessment of Iran’s nuclear transparency cast a pall over months of hard-fought diplomacy aimed at restoring its landmark atomic accord with world powers that has broad implications for Middle Eastern security, global business and oil markets.

International Atomic Energy Agency inspectors circulated two confidential reports among diplomats in Vienna late Monday that paint a far from rosy picture of Iran’s willingness to address concerns over its past and present nuclear activities.

The conclusions will feed into a parallel diplomatic track at an IAEA meeting next week, where the Persian Gulf nation could be subject to formal censure by the agency’s 35-nation board of governors.

If Iran considers any condemnation to be especially harsh, the spat could further delay talks also taking place in the Austrian capital over reviving the 2015 deal. That accord had capped Iranian enrichment in return for sanctions relief until former President Donald Trump all but collapsed it by withdrawing the U.S.

A top official in Tehran suggested Tuesday that Iran is now hoping to secure an agreement before President Hassan Rouhani leaves office in August, after previously envisioning a deal before the June 18 election that will start winding down his presidency.

Rouhani is widely expected to be succeeded by a r who will be more hostile to the U.S. and the nuclear deal.

IAEA Director General Rafael Mariano Grossi reported that Iran has continued to stonewall diplomats investigating decades-old traces of uranium found at undeclared sites, according to a copy of a 6-page document seen by Bloomberg.

The Argentine diplomat’s suggestion that Iran could be providing incomplete information has potentially serious consequences. The entire international apparatus of rules that the IAEA enforces is based on verifying nations’ declared nuclear material and nuclear-related activities. Failures can result in referrals to the UN Security Council.

“The lack of progress in clarifying the agency’s questions concerning the correctness and completeness of Iran’s safeguards declarations seriously affects the ability of the Agency to provide assurance of the peaceful nature of Iran’s nuclear program,” reads the document.

Potentially more worrying, Iranian restrictions imposed on IAEA monitors are undercutting international safeguards, even as the country dramatically ramps up its nuclear activities. Monitors listed 15 areas in Iran where they can no longer do their job, including the verification of centrifuge machine shops and some parts of the uranium fuel cycle. Investigators no longer have daily access to key Iranian enrichment facilities at Fordow or Natanz.

“The agency’s verification and monitoring activities have been affected as a result of Iran’s decision to stop the implementation of its nuclear-related commitments,” Grossi told diplomats in a second 13-page report.

Historically, such conclusions would result in diplomatic censure of Iran in the form of an IAEA resolution. The country has been subject more than a dozen such motions since 2003, including the consequential 2006 referral to the Security Council that set off the subsequent waves of international sanctions that still linger.

But with nuclear talks still in high gear and Iran’s election nearing, IAEA envoys may exercise more caution when the convene June 7. Iran had threatened to rip up a provisional monitoring arrangement if it faced censure at the last IAEA board meeting.

Envoys will have to decide whether reconstituting intrusive nuclear inspections -- widely seen by world powers as the most important element of the 2015 nuclear deal -- requires diplomatic coercion or dialog.

More stories like this are available on bloomberg.com

©2021 Bloomberg L.P.

By Jonathan Tirone

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