Iran threatens nuclear escalation
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Iran, Israel and Soreq Nuclear Research Center
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The IAEA held a board session Wednesday on Iran's nuclear program, during which Britain, France, and Germany warned Iran that its escalating nuclear activities—such as 60 percent enrichment of uranium and expansion of centrifuge and stockpile limits—undermine the JCPOA, a 2015 deal with Iran, but did not call for immediate punitive steps.
Iran condemned a Western-backed IAEA resolution and announced plans to establish a new uranium enrichment facility in response, calling the move politically motivated and technically baseless.
Board of Governors has passed resolution formally declaring Iran noncompliant with its nonproliferation obligations for the first time since 2005, a move Tehran immediately condemned.
The International Atomic Energy Agency has adopted a resolution criticizing Iran for failing to cooperate fully with the agency in its investigation. In response, Iran announced a plan to launch a new enrichment center.
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Iran’s nuclear program remains a top focus for inspectors from the International Atomic Energy Agency, particularly as any possible deal between Tehran and the United States over the program would lik
Iran's acquisition of confidential U.N. nuclear watchdog documents is a 'bad' step that goes against the spirit of cooperation that should exist between the agency and Tehran, its chief Rafael Grossi said on Monday.
The whereabouts of these resources is currently unknown.The IAEA also discussed and connected these activities to the missing amount of uranium that was once present at Iran’s Jaber Ibn Hayan Multipurpose Laboratory (JHL).