Iran Nuclear NewsPrice to pay if Iran does not halt enrichment:...

Price to pay if Iran does not halt enrichment: US diplomat

-

AFP: Iran will have a price to pay if it does not cooperate with the UN nuclear watchdog International Atomic Energy Agency and halt uranium enrichment, a top US official said Thursday in Vienna. VIENNA (AFP) — Iran will have a price to pay if it does not cooperate with the UN nuclear watchdog International Atomic Energy Agency and halt uranium enrichment, a top US official said Thursday in Vienna.

“It’s very important that we send this message that there is going to be a price to what Iran does. And that price will be increased isolation and heightened sanctions,” the US under-secretary of state for political affairs, Nicholas Burns, told journalists ahead of a meeting with IAEA chief Mohamed ElBaradei.

“If Iran has not suspended its enrichment program in Natanz by a couple weeks’ time, that’s going to be a highly relevant factor” as it will show Tehran has not complied with UN Security Council resolutions, Burns added.

The Security Council has already passed two resolutions calling for sanctions if Iran does not fully suspend its enrichment and reprocessing activities and the United States is pushing for a third.

“Iran has chosen the route of sanctions,” Burns said.

Ahead of his meeting with ElBaradei, he added that the US took issue with comments the director-general had made in the past “that would seem to indicate that sanctions might not work.”

ElBaradei sparked controversy in the US when he told CNN on Sunday that he had no evidence that Iran was building nuclear weapons and emphasised the need for “creative diplomacy” rather than sanctions.

“I don’t see any other solution than diplomacy and inspections,” ElBaradei said.

Burns repeated calls for the Security Council to pass a sanctions resolution on Tehran as soon as possible.

He also called for the European Union to impose further sanctions and for major trading partners to cut ties with Iran.

The five permanent Security Council members — the US, China, Russia, France and Britain — and Germany will meet Friday in London to discuss strengthening UN sanctions against Tehran.

Latest news

War and its Impact on Children’s Education in Iran

Repeated school closures during the war between the United States and Iran's regime have severely reduced the quality of...

Iran: Violent Transfer of Political Prisoners to the Notorious Ghezel Hesar Prison

On Monday, April 13, seven political prisoners held in Ward 7 of Evin Prison in Tehran were abruptly, violently,...

The German Government Will Not Receive the Son of Iran’s Last Shah

Following reports of Reza Pahlavi, the son of Iran’s last Shah Mohammad Reza Pahlavi, traveling to Germany to attend...

700,000 Jobs Lost in Iran as A Result of War

While the fate of the war in the region remains uncertain, reports from Iran indicate a suffocating livelihood crisis...

Iran: How Pahlavi’s Name Stole the January 2026 Uprising

In the biting cold of mid-January 2026, the air in Tehran’s Vali-e-Asr Square was thick with the scent of...

Escalating Executions in Iran Put EU Policy Under Scrutiny

A conference held at the European Parliament in Brussels on April 22, 2026, brought renewed attention to the escalating...

Must read

Iran rejects nuclear talks with preconditions

AFP: Iran said Tuesday it would not accept resuming...

US Government pressurises banks to stop dealing with Iran

The Independent: Dozens of banks have stopped or scaled...

You might also likeRELATED
Recommended to you