Iran accuses IAEA of blocking nuclear progress under US pressure
Mohammad Eslami, the head of the Atomic Energy Organization of Iran.
The International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) creates obstacles to Iran's use of peaceful nuclear technology due to US pressure, Mohammad Eslami, head of Iran's Atomic Energy Organization, said Thursday.
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“The IAEA is obligated to promote, facilitate, and support peaceful nuclear technology so that it is accessible to all nations,” Eslami said during a state TV interview. “They mediate whatever is necessary to enable other countries to provide the technology you need, but when it comes to us, they create obstacles because they are implementing US congressional laws.”
"The sanctions are not aimed at economic goals; rather, they are intended to instill this narrative: 'If you don’t have money, why spend it on nuclear energy?' This is their tactic and tool to pursue their objective of preventing us from obtaining nuclear knowledge," Eslami said regarding sanctions on Iran's nuclear program.
Eslami also criticized the director of the UN nuclear watchdog on Wednesday for making what he described as provocative statements regarding Tehran’s nuclear program. He said that despite Iran accepting limitations on its nuclear activities to build trust and in exchange for the lifting of sanctions, the agency continues to misrepresent Tehran’s efforts.
Rafael Grossi, head of IAEA, said Monday that the 2015 Iran nuclear deal, known as the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action (JCPOA), is no longer sufficient to curb Tehran’s uranium enrichment, which has exceeded international limits.
"Iran is enriching uranium close to military levels and is rapidly moving towards becoming a nuclear state," Grossi told the ANSA news agency. "The philosophy of the original accord with Iran can be used, but that agreement is no longer useful," he added.
Kazem Gharibabadi, Iran’s deputy foreign minister for legal and international affairs, also responded to Grossi’s remarks, stating, "The Director General of a specialized organization is expected to speak based on facts and technical reports from the Agency's inspectors. Reading intentions based on hypothetical scenarios is not part of the Director General's duties and is contrary to the letter and spirit of the Agency's statute."
On December 6, the IAEA reported that Iran had significantly accelerated its production of 60% enriched uranium, which is now approximately five times higher than a month ago. Iran is believed to possess enough 60% enriched uranium to produce four to five atomic bombs, should it choose to pursue nuclear weapons.
Since the US withdrew from the JCPOA, Iran has breached its nuclear commitments, increasing uranium enrichment to 60%, near weapons-grade levels. Subsequent negotiations with the US and the E3 (France, Germany, and Great Britain) have failed to revive the deal or secure a new agreement. With ten months remaining until the “Termination Day” for UN Resolution 2231, which sealed the JCPOA, the impasse on restoring the nuclear deal continues.
Government offices, schools, and universities in Tehran were shuttered on Thursday as the country's ongoing energy crisis escalated in a week of shutdowns across Iran.
Tehran's Governor Mohammad Sadegh Motamedian said closures of facilities this week have had little impact on reducing energy consumption or alleviating pollution.
"The closures have merely shifted the crisis from one point to another," he said, adding that they had led to more traffic, higher gasoline consumption, and, consequently, increased pollution.
The crisis has been unfolding across Iran. Ahmad Mousavi, CEO of the electricity distribution company in Golestan province, said that only a 10% decrease in consumption was seen after four-day closures.
The closures, which began earlier this week, are part of a broader set of measures taken across the country to combat both air pollution and the ongoing energy crisis.
It has seen the shutdown of 390 public and private swimming pools in Tehran alone. Additionally, industrial units have been forced to operate at reduced capacity, with small industrial units now working only two to three days a week due to ongoing energy shortages.
The economic cost of the closures is substantial for a country in the midst of the worst recession since the founding of the Islamic Republic, with losses estimated at 50,000 billion rials (over 63 million dollars) per day.
Industries face full wage payments despite significantly reduced working hours, and businesses are struggling to absorb the financial burden of both energy shortages.
The ongoing disruptions are also expected to exacerbate budgetary challenges for the government, which has projected a 39% increase in tax revenues for the next fiscal year—a target that may be difficult to meet given the widespread economic losses.
With the energy crisis showing no signs of easing, in spite of Iran's having one of the world's largest natural gas reserves and vast oil reserves, the situation is expected to worsen if international sanctions and domestic mismanagement continue to stifle necessary investment in the energy sector.
Energy expert Narsi Ghorban estimates that $250 billion is required to address oil and gas infrastructure issues, with an additional $19 billion needed for the electricity sector.
The looming threat of a return to stricter sanctions, particularly with the return of Donald Trump who has promised "maximum pressure" in his Iran policy, adds further uncertainty to Iran’s already fragile economic outlook.
Moscow evacuated 4,000 Iranian soldiers from Syria to Tehran by air after rebels took control of the country, Russian President Vladimir Putin said on Thursday, suggesting Iran depended on Russia to flee the country after it fell to rebels.
Just as Iran had originally requested Russia transport its units to Syria to back now ousted President Bashar al-Assad, Putin said in remarks carried by state media, Tehran again sought Moscow's aid to evacuate the soldiers.
"If earlier, for example, our Iranian friends asked us to help them transport their units to Syrian territory, now they asked us to withdraw them from there," Putin said. "We took 4,000 Iranian fighters to Tehran from the Hmeimim base. Some of the so-called pro-Iranian units left without a fight for Lebanon, some for Iraq."
But a senior commander of Iran’s Revolutionary Guards swiftly denied the claim later on Thursday, marking a rare public disagreement between the two partners in arms.
"A large number of Iranians have been living in Syria for a long time, and Russia relocated most of them to Iran," said Mohammad Jafar Asadi, deputy commander of the Khatam-al Anbiya Central Headquarters, a construction giant.
"These were not Iran's advisory forces; we withdrew our advisory forces from Syria ourselves," he added. "We do not allow Russia to relocate our military forces."
The Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC), a transnational military organization that lies at the heart of Iran's ruling establishment, has been a key ally of Russia in Syria and Ukraine.
Moscow has launched hundreds of IRGC-provided drones at Kyiv's forces while Iranian and Russian troops together fought the Islamist rebels now running Syria after they seized Damascus from President Bashar al-Assad.
Mohammad Jafar Asadi, deputy commander of the Khatam-al Anbiya Central Headquarters
Staying in Syria
Putin suggested Russia's decades-old military presence was not set to be upended by Syria's upheaval, even as Iran appeared to have been decisively ejected.
“We maintain contact with all groupings in Syria and all countries in the region. They all say that it would be better if we kept our bases there,” Putin said in his first public comments on the subject.
Putin also said he had not yet met with former Syrian President Bashar al-Assad since his overthrow and subsequent flight to Moscow earlier this month but noted that he planned to do so.
Russia, which intervened in Syria in 2015 and shifted the course of the civil war in Assad's favor, had also informed other countries that they could use its air and naval base to deliver humanitarian aid to Syria, he said.
"You want to portray everything that is happening in Syria as some kind of failure, a defeat for Russia. I assure you, it is not. And I'll tell you why. We came to Syria 10 years ago to prevent a terrorist enclave from being created there," said Putin.
"On the whole, we have achieved our goal. It is not for nothing that today many European countries and the United States want to establish relations with them (Syria's new rulers). If they are terrorist organisations, why are you (the West) going there? So that means they have changed."
His comments come as European Union (EU) nations seek assurances from Syria's new leaders that they will distance themselves from Russia and Iran and work toward a peaceful future for the country after years of civil war.
“Russia and Iran are not your friends, (and) are not helping you if you are in trouble. They left Assad’s regime, and that is a very clear message showing that their hands are full elsewhere and they are weakened,” EU foreign policy chief Kaja Kallas said on Monday, addressing Syria’s new leaders.
Iranian hardliners who ironically spent time in the United States are responsible for pushing policies which deepen Iran's isolation and weakness, a leading centrist news outlet fulminated this week.
A few of these hardliners, who were born or lived in the United States, have become a particular focus of criticism.
Entekhab wore on Tuesday that several hardliners with US ties—whether born, raised or having resided there—are promoting radical ideas in foreign policy. The paper regarded this as a strange phenomenon that people who benefited from education or experience in the United States are now promoting policies that could increase Iran's isolation.
The website featured images of several individuals with similar backgrounds, including political commentators Foad Izadi and Mohammad Marandi, as well as former Paydari Party leader Morteza Aqa-Tehrani. It further alleged that "all of these hardline figures support ultraconservative former nuclear negotiator Saeed Jalili."
Entekhab quoted Heshmatollah Falahatpisheh, the former head of the Iranian parliament's Foreign Relations and National Security Committee, criticizing Iranian ultraconservative academic Foad Izadi. Falahatpisheh remarked, "Izadi grew up, attended school, and lived in the United States for several decades. Yet, upon returning to Iran, he was appointed as a university faculty member and introduced on state television as a political expert on the United States. In all the programs he has participated in, he has done nothing but promote international tensions. Isn't there something wrong here?"
According to Entekhab, Izadi is a member of the ultraconservative Paydari Party. "Yet, he is not the only Iranian hardliner who grew up in the United States and lived there for some time."
Just last week, Mohammad Marandi, a vocal critic of Iran's nuclear agreement with the United States and other world powers, sparked controversy by suggesting that Iran might target Qatar, and a major US military base located there. Marandi, who frequently appears on Iranian state television and international channels to voice his anti-US rhetoric, raised the threat in an X post about a potential US attack on Iran’s nuclear facilities. He wrote: “Slight problem. The US Al Udeid air base is in tiny Qatar. In case of aggression, the natural gas facilities and infrastructure in Qatar will be totally destroyed. Hence, there will be no natural gas from Doha. Hence, there will be no Qatar. Things won’t end there either…”
According to Rouydad24 news website in Tehran, Mohammad Marandi was born in the US in 1966 form an Iranian father and an American mother. He is the son of Alireza Marandi who is Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei's family doctor. When he first came to Iran after his father was appointed health minister, he was only 13. He was part of Iran’s nuclear negotiating team in Vienna in 2021-2022.
Hardline cleric Morteza Aqa-Tehrani, who has denied holding US citizenship, acknowledged to the press that he possesses a green card, having lived in the United States for many years while serving as the Imam of an Iranian mosque in New York. Notably, Iran's parliament did not address his US residency status when enacting a law that prohibits US citizens and permanent residence permit holders from holding key positions in Iran.
Entekhab wrote: "While the hardliners label former Foreign Minister Zarif and his aides as 'the New York Gang,' it seems these ultraconservative figures are the true members of that gang." The website also criticized Mohammad Marandi for his unrealistic claims that Europe would capitulate to Iran's demands during the "hard winter" of 2022 due to a need for Iranian natural gas. In reality, not only did Iran lack gas to supply Europe, but it was forced to purchase gas from Turkmenistan and struggled to pay for it. Marandi used the argument to persuade others that there was no need to make a nuclear deal in mid-2022 and Tehran could wait for the West to capitulate.
The website also charged that "Marandi and his hard winter theory were the main reason why Iran was not able to conclude successful negotiations with the West over its nuclear program."
Iran’s Central Bank plans to sell foreign currencies next week in an effort to stabilize the rial, which has been losing value against the US dollar and other major currencies.
According to the Tasnim news website, affiliated with the Revolutionary Guard, the bank will inject 1.5 billion UAE dirhams and 300 million US dollars in cash into Tehran’s free exchange market.
The rial has depreciated by over 25% since September, driven by regional conflicts and Iran’s setbacks in Syria and Lebanon. On Thursday, the rial traded at nearly 770,000 per US dollar, a sharp drop from around 600,000 in September.
Since the establishment of the Islamic government in 1979, the Iranian currency has experienced an 11,000-fold decline in value.
Iranian President Masoud Pezeshkian met with D-8 Secretary-General Isiaka Abdulqadir Imam on Thursday, calling for a joint investment fund to drive the organization’s goals.
"The D-8 Organization provides a vast market and an excellent platform for member Islamic countries to enhance and develop trade, cultural, scientific, and technological exchanges," Pezeshkian said.
"We believe that if the decisions and resolutions adopted by the D-8 were properly followed through and implemented, the eight Islamic countries could have maximized their benefits from the organization's capacities."