The U.N. watchdog tasked with monitoring Iran's nuclear activities certified Thursday that the country remains in compliance with a 2015 accord struck with world powers, even as the Trump administration has threatened to withdraw from the deal.
In its quarterly report to member states, the International Atomic Energy Agency said that Iran's stock of low-enriched uranium, which is used for peaceful purposes, is in line with the nuclear pact, as is the number of centrifuges used for enrichment.
The report, which is confidential but was seen by multiple news agencies, also stated that Iran has "not pursued the construction"of its heavy water reactor at Arak, which would give it the capability to produce weapons-grade plutonium.
The agency uses electronic seals and online enrichment monitors to send reports to inspectors in real time. It also conducts on-site visits and has access to satellite imagery.
Iran's envoy to the agency, Reza Najafi, hailed the report as reflective of the watchdog's "unbiased and professional" work, Iranian media reported. The State Department also said in a statement that the United States has "full confidence in the agency and its highly skilled and professional inspectors."
The document published Thursday is the watchdog's eighth certification of Iran's compliance since the deal took effect in January 2016. It comes just one week after the U.S. envoy to the United Nations, Nikki Haley, visited the agency in Vienna to convey the administration's concerns about ensuring Iran's strict compliance with the agreement. The administration has placed the accord, which was negotiated by the Obama White House, under interagency review. It says it does not do enough to address other issues like Iran's ballistic missile development or human rights violations in the region.
Haley called on the agency to "pursue every angle possible" to monitor Iran's activities, including inspections of military sites Iran says are not part of its nuclear research program. Under the accord - known as the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action, or JCPOA - the agency can request access to military sites if there is credible evidence of malfeasance.
A U.S. official said Thursday that Haley "did not ask the IAEA to inspect any specific sites, nor did she provide the IAEA with any new intelligence." The official spoke on the condition of anonymity because the agency's report has not yet officially been made public.
"She conveyed that the IAEA will need to continue to robustly exercise its authorities" to monitor the JCPOA, the official said, "including access to undeclared and military affiliated sites where the agency has questions about nuclear-related activities."
But critics see the push for further inspections as an attempt to politicize the agency's work, and potentially force Iran to withdraw from the deal. The administration, including President Trump, has repeatedly threatened to pull out of the accord. Trump told The Wall Street Journal in July that he "did not expect" to declare Iran compliant in the coming months, despite a lack of public evidence of any Iranian violations.
"Almost any other U.S. administration would have a very hard time shrugging off the data provided by the IAEA, since it's such a trusted source," said Colin Kahl, a former deputy assistant to former president Barack Obama. Kahl now serves on the advisory council of Diplomacy Works, an organization committed to upholding the JCPOA.
"However, President Trump has shown disdain for the Iran deal, and most multilateral efforts," he said. "So the IAEA report does make it harder for the Trump administration to make its case for decertifying Iran's compliance. . . but that doesn't necessarily make it less likely to happen."
The Washington Post
Fri Sep 01 2017
Iran's national flags are seen on a square in Tehran February 10, 2012. REUTERS/Morteza Nikoubazl/File Photo
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