Iran Says Cooperation With UN Nuclear Watchdog Limited to NPT
Mohammad Eslami, head of Iran's Atomic Energy Organization
Iran’s top nuclear official says the country's interactions with the UN nuclear watchdog, IAEA, are limited to the legal boundaries of the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT) and the Safeguards.
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Mohammad Eslami emphasized that the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) has no right to demand anything beyond these limits.
The statement arises amid increased scrutiny over Iran's nuclear activities, with international concern about potential NPT violations.
In his Sunday remarks, Eslami argued that the IAEA's role should be confined to "legal obligations" that the agency should maintain without exceeding its mandate.
"The agency is responsible for oversight, encouragement, and fair distribution of nuclear technology. This is a legal obligation, and it must be pursued and demanded within this framework. Beyond this, there is nothing else that the agency should bring up," Eslami said.
Critics see the interpretation by Iran as an attempt to avoid comprehensive inspections and conceal the extent of its nuclear activities. The IAEA has repeatedly expressed concerns about Iran's cooperation with its investigations and the transparency of its nuclear program.
Earlier this month, Board members of the IAEA passed a resolution criticizing Iran's lack of cooperation with IAEA nuclear inspections.
A recent report from the nuclear watchdog indicates that Iran's stockpile of enriched uranium now exceeds 30 times the limit established by the 2015 nuclear deal between Tehran and world powers (JCPOA). The uranium is enriched to 60 percent, which is near the 90 percent enrichment level required for nuclear weapons.
The Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action (JCPOA), established in 2015 between Iran and the P5+1 countries (the US, UK, France, Russia, China, and Germany), aimed to curb Iran’s nuclear capabilities in exchange for lifting economic sanctions. However, the accord has been under strain since the US withdrawal in 2018, prompting Iran to progressively breach several of its commitments, such as exceeding the uranium enrichment levels and stockpile limits set by the agreement.
Iran's advancements include resuming enrichment at the Fordow Fuel Enrichment Plant and enhancing enrichment purity up to 60%. These actions reduce the breakout time needed to produce enough fissile material for a nuclear weapon, raising concerns about the dual-use nature of Iran's nuclear program.
The IAEA has struggled with monitoring challenges due to restrictions imposed by Iran, which complicate efforts to verify the extent of Iran’s enrichment activities. The agency's reports suggest that Iran has accumulated enough enriched uranium that could be quickly elevated to weapons-grade levels, amplifying worries about Iran’s intentions.
Iran maintains that its nuclear program is solely for peaceful purposes, but its near-weapons-grade enrichment activities continue to provoke international unease.
In its June report, the IAEA said Iran aims to continue expanding its nuclear program in ways that "have no credible peaceful purpose."
Former Iranian President Hassan Rouhani says Iran incurred an annual loss of some $100 billion over the past three years due to sanctions that forced the country to sell oil and petrochemicals at discounted rates.
Rouhani accused former president Ebrahim Raisi's government of "betraying" the Iranian people by causing $300 billion in damages over the course of three years.
Rouhani's claims come amid a presidential election campaign during which his administration has been harshly criticized by hardliners. His remarks seem to be somewhat exaggerated in terms of the amount of revenue losses. In fact, the Raisi administration has sold much more oil than in 2019-2021, the last three years of Rouhani's presidency, after the United States imposed sanctions.
After former US president Donald Trump withdrew from the JCPOA nuclear accord and imposed third-party oil export sanctions on Iran, shipments declined from two million barrels a day to around 250,000. With the election of Joe Biden, China began increasing its oil imports from Iran, which have reached 1.3 million barrels per day.
In addition, even if Iran exported two million barrels, the revenue would still be far below $100 billion, at less than $60 billion at current average prices.
Rouhani's rebuke also targeted the December 2020 Strategic Action Law to Lift Sanctions and Safeguard Iran's National Interests, enacted under the leadership of conservative parliament speaker Mohammad Bagher Ghalibaf. The bill, intended to pressure the newly elected Biden administration, authorized uranium enrichment at 20%—far higher than the JCPOA limits—and reduced international nuclear inspections by the UN watchdog, the IAEA.
He condemned the legislation as "the worst in the history of the Islamic Republic of Iran," dismissing it as a "conspiracy" to undermine his administration.
"We have never had a worse law. It was clearly designed to ensure that the people cannot breathe. I know exactly who was behind its design and implementation," Rouhani said in a Wednesday speech whose text was published Sunday.
As the Biden administration entered into indirect talks with Iran in April 2021 ro revive the JCPOA, Tehran continued to escalate its nuclear violations and eventually the negotiations failed in 2022. Although the Biden administration has relaxed the enforcement of the oil sanctions, Iran's economy is still under pressure with annual inflation hovering around 50%.
His remarks were in direct response to criticisms from ultra-conservative candidates in the upcoming June 28 elections, who, during televised debates, have lambasted Rouhani’s administration for its “inefficiency” and criticized the 2015 nuclear agreement negotiated under his leadership.
Lebanon's Hezbollah is amassing a large cache of Iranian weapons at Beirut’s main civilian airport, Rafic Hariri International Airport, whistleblowers say.
There are also reports of the presence of AT-14 Kornet anti-tank guided missiles, Burkan short-range ballistic missiles, and RDX explosives.
The situation at the airport, located just four miles from Beirut's city center, has escalated concerns that it could become a military target for Israel amid rising tensions between the two sides.
One airport worker revealed the arrival of "mysterious large boxes from Iran," marking a concerning uptick in arms storage that coincides with heightened regional tensions. The worker expressed fears reminiscent of the devastating Beirut port explosion in 2020, suggesting that a similar incident could occur at the airport due to such activities.
Insiders report that Hezbollah's influence over airport operations has visibly increased, with the group's key figures, like its second-in-command Wafiq Safa, being regularly spotted managing affairs directly, intensifying the threat of retaliation by Israeli forces.
Later on Sunday, Lebanon’s Hezbollah-affiliated Transport Minister Ali Hamieh held a press conference at the Beirut–Rafic Hariri International Airport to dismiss what he called "ridiculous" allegations by whistleblowers that the airport is used by Hezbollah to store Iranian weapons.
He invited journalists and ambassadors to take a tour of the airport's facilities on Monday morning to prove "there's nothing to hide".
He also said that his office is in the process of filing a lawsuit against Telegraph.
Hezbollah, Iran's most formidable proxy, funded, trained, and armed by Tehran, continues its daily skirmishes with Israeli forces amid the ongoing Gaza conflict. The northern border conflict marks the most severe since the Second Lebanon War.
Since the October 7 invasion, Hezbollah, along with Iran's proxies in Syria, Yemen, Iraq, and Gaza, has supported Hamas by launching missiles towards all of Israel's borders.
Iran's Oil Minister Javad Owji has refuted claims by some presidential candidates that the government is offering high discounts to foreign oil customers amid US sanctions.
Owji said on Sunday that the administration of late president Ebrahim Raisi did not offer "high discounts" to its buyers, tacitly referring to Chinese refineries that are the main importers of Iran’s crude.
He said that over the past three years, significantly fewer discounts have been given compared to the previous government.
Tehran keeps its export and revenue details as state secret but Owji’s remarks come despite reports that Tehran provides huge discountsto China, charging as little as $37 per barrel while oil has been trading at around 75-85 dollars in the past year. According to a report by Reuters Iran offers at least $13/barrel discount to Chinese refineries.
In May 2023, an analyst quoted an unnamed EU energy security source as saying that China, which already had secured a 30-percent discount from Iran before the Russian invasion of Ukraine, demanded and received higher price cuts. Beijing already buys Russian oil at a large discount.
Iran's oil minister Owji speaking to the media in 2021.
“But it is even worse for Iran, as – from 11 November 2022 - China has been paying Iran in non-convertible Yuan, that is Yuan that can only be used inside China and/or spent buying Chinese goods,” the EU source added. “Worse still is that whilst Yuan is the key instrument in payment, China is also using the currencies of Angola, Zambia and Kenya to pay Iran, and China is doing this as a means to induce Iran to buys goods from these countries so that these countries, in turn, can service their loans to China,” he argued.
Last June, The Wall Street Journal reported that Iran was exporting the highest amount of crude oil in five years, although it offers discounts of up to $30 per barrel. The report confirmed estimates that Iran shipped 1.6 million barrels per day in May and June, up from 250,000 barrels in 2019 and 2020, just after the United States imposed full sanctions.
Data from oil tanker tracking companies like Vortexa and TankerTrackers shows that Iran exported roughly 1.3 million barrels per day (bpd) of crude oil and condensate in 2023, along with over 220,000 bpd of fuel oil (mazut).
OPEC estimated the price of Iranian oil exports in 2023, excluding discounts and sanctions-busting costs, to be above $83 per barrel. Based on this, Iran's revenue from crude oil, condensate, and fuel oil exports should have been at least $46 billion. However, Iranian customs data reveals the actual figure was only $36 billion.
This $10 billion discrepancy suggests that around 22% of Iran's oil revenue was lost due to high discounts and sanctions-related costs.
Another way to look at the issue is that Iran needs around $50 billion from oil exports to balance its budget, but at least half of that amount is not realized. This means it receives around $25 billion in hard currency.
Another reason for Iran’s oil revenues being probably around $25 billion is the costs involved in illicit shipments to evade sanctions, and losing money in trying to repatriate the funds in hard currencies. Iran’s banking system is under US sanction and any oil revenues are laundered through intermediaries.
This issue resonated during the recent Iranian presidential election. Candidates Masoud Pezeshkan and Mohammad Bagher Ghalibaf both directly and indirectly criticized the impact of sanctions, high discounts, and wasted revenue from oil exports.
Despite the evidence, the oil minister continues to insist on his claim of not offering high discounts. He stated that Iran currently has 15 oil buyers, but only named China and Syria, leaving the identities of the remaining "customers" undisclosed.
Adding to the confusion, Oji claimed Iran's daily crude oil production has reached 3.6 million bpd. This contradicts figures from OPEC and the International Energy Agency, which estimate the actual production to be below 3.3 million bpd.
The Iranian Chess Federation has announced a suspension of all activities, including competitions and training in the lead-up to the Presidential elections in a bid to ensure people come to the polls.
"While encouraging all the great chess community of the country to participate enthusiastically and widely in the elections, by the order of the Ministry of Sports, any sports activities, including holding competitions, training courses, and classes, etc. are prohibited from June 27-30, 2024," said the statement from the Ministry of Sport.
If the elections extend to a second stage, the suspension will also apply from July 4 to July 7, 2024, it added.
The federation did not provide further explanation for its decision or specify how training classes or chess tournaments could impede the presidential elections.
It comes as record low turnout is expected for the snap election on June 28. The elections were called after President Ebrahim Raisi died in a freak helicopter crash last month along with his delegation.
Latest polls predict at least two thirds of Iran will abstain from the sham vote which offers six candidates, hand chosen by the country's supreme leader.
As Iran approaches its snap presidential elections, families of slain protestors and activists are urging the public to boycott the event.
Goljahan Ashrafpour, the mother of Akbar Mohammadi, a student activist who died in prison, called the elections "a charade", speaking from her hospital bed.
Atash Shakrami, the aunt of 16-year-old Nika Shakrami, a protestor killed during Iran’s 2022 nationwide uprising, spoke out on Instagram.
"The hands of every government agent are stained with the blood of the nation's children," she stated, underscoring the pain and anger felt by many families who have lost loved ones under the regime oppression.
Writing on Instagram, Foad Choobin, the uncle of 17-year-old Artin Rahmani, killed during the protests in November 2022, reminded the public of the tragic events that took his nephew's life.
"We will not forget that in November 2022, agents of the Islamic Republic shot at us and killed Artin...we will not participate in this election circus…we will not vote for any of the 6 candidates who whitewash Khamenei’s crimes," he wrote.
In recent days many activists, student unions, and prominent opposition figures of the Islamic Republic have called for the boycott of the elections.
Like the March parliamentary elections, turnout is expected to be at record lows. At least two thirds of Iranians revealed they do not plan to vote, according to latest figures.