Iran Nuclear NewsUN atomic agency creates 'Iran Task Force'

UN atomic agency creates ‘Iran Task Force’

-

AFP: The head of the UN atomic agency has approved the creation of a special “task force” to better monitor Iran’s controversial nuclear programme, an internal IAEA document seen by AFP on Wednesday showed. VIENNA (AFP)— The head of the UN atomic agency has approved the creation of a special “task force” to better monitor Iran’s controversial nuclear programme, an internal IAEA document seen by AFP on Wednesday showed.

The new International Atomic Energy Agency team, revealed by diplomats last week, will include experts from several fields to pool the Vienna-based watchdog’s limited resources more efficiently.

The short IAEA document said the task force “will perform functions related to the implementation of the Agreement between the Islamic Republic of Iran and the Agency for the Application of Safeguards in Connection with the Treaty on the Non-Proliferation of Nuclear Weapons and the relevant provisions of resolutions of the (IAEA) Board of Governors and the United Nations Security Council.”

Iran says its nuclear work is for nuclear power and producing medical isotopes but Western nations, Israel and many others in the international community suspect its real aim is to develop the atomic bomb.

Because the IAEA has repeatedly said that it is “unable” to conclude that Iran’s activities are peaceful, the UN Security Council has called on Iran to cease all uranium enrichment, imposing four rounds of sanctions.

Enriched uranium can be used for peaceful purposes but also, at highly concentrated purities, for nuclear weapons.

The IAEA’s latest quarterly report, expected later this week, is expected to reassert this assessment, as well as to say that Iran has continued to expand its activities despite the UN resolutions, increased sanctions and threats of war.

Not only is the IAEA tasked with keeping tabs on Iran’s current activities, it is also attempting to probe suspicions that until 2003, and possibly since, Iran had a structured programme of research into developing nuclear weapons.

The latest in a series of attempts to persuade Iran to give the IAEA access to documents, scientists and sites involved in this alleged drive to get the bomb failed on Friday.

So far Iran has flatly rejected the claims, set out in a major IAEA report last November, and says it will only give the agency the desired access as part of a broader agreement governing its future relations with the watchdog.

In particular the IAEA wants to be able to visit the Parchin military base near Tehran where it believes Iran conducted explosives tests for nuclear warhead designs. Western nations accuse Iran of “sanitizing” the site to remove evidence.

Latest news

Iran’s Car Market Experiences Sharp Surge in Prices Afte War-Induced Stagnation

Media outlets in Iran report that the prices of many domestically produced cars have increased by 3 billion to...

UN Officials Call for a Halt to Executions and Repression in Iran

Volker Türk, the United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights, in a statement published on April 29, strongly condemned...

Iran’s National Currency Has Declined by 120% Over the Past Year

Reports from Iran indicate a sharp surge in the price of the U.S. dollar in the open market in...

US Preparing for a Long-Term Blockade of Iran’s Ports

The Wall Street Journal, citing US officials, reported that US President Donald Trump has ordered preparations for a long-term...

War Economy and Stagflation in Iran

Unemployment and inflation in a war for which the Iranian regime is the primary cause are no longer merely...

Transfer of a death-row political prisoner to solitary confinement in Urmia, Iran

Punitive transfer of death-row political prisoner Mehrab Abdollahzadeh to solitary confinement in Urmia Prison Mehrab Abdollahzadeh, a political prisoner sentenced...

Must read

Consideration of new Iran sanctions has begun – EU

Reuters: Six major powers are now considering possible further...

Social calamities in Iran

Iran Focus: London, Apr. 15 - More than one...

You might also likeRELATED
Recommended to you