The Islamic Republic of Iran, the worldâs leading state sponsor of terrorism, has failed to honor a key agreement that it reached with the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) just a couple of weeks ago.
The deal reached between the two sides would allow the IAEAâs inspectors to service damaged monitoring equipment at one of Iranâs nuclear facilities.
The agency said in a statement:
The (IAEA) Director General (Rafael Grossi) stresses that Iranâs decision not to allow agency access to the TESA Karaj centrifuge component manufacturing workshop is contrary to the agreed terms of the joint statement issued on 12 September. âŠ
Iran from 20â22 September permitted IAEA inspectors to service identified agency monitoring and surveillance equipment and to replace storage media at all necessary locations in Iran with the exception of the centrifuge component manufacturing workshop at the TESA Karaj complex.
âThe Sept. 12 agreement, reached on the eve of a meeting of the IAEAâs 35-nation Board of Governors, meant Western powers chose not to seek a resolution criticising Iran at that meeting since the equipmentâs memory cards would be replaced just as they were due to fill up,â Reuters reported. âThat workshop was the victim of apparent sabotage in June in which one of four IAEA cameras there was destroyed. Iran has not returned that cameraâs âdata storage mediumâ and the IAEA said in a report this month it had asked Iran to locate it and explain. Under the deal the IAEA was due to replace its cameras.â
The matter comes as Iran is rapidly moving toward having enough nuclear material to be able to have a nuclear weapon, something that could spark a war in the region as Israel has repeatedly indicated that it will not allow Iran to reach that point.
Back at the start of August, Israeli Defense Minister Benny Gantz said that Iran was âonly around 10 weeks away from acquiring weapons-grade materials necessary for a nuclear weapon.â
On September 13th, The New York Times reported that Iran, according to the IAEA, âhas come within roughly a month of having enough material to fuel a single nuclear weapon.â
âExperts studying new data contained in reports last week by the International Atomic Energy Agency, the United Nationsâ atomic inspection group, say that by enriching nuclear fuel in recent months to near bomb-grade levels, Tehran has gained the capability to produce the fuel needed for a single nuclear warhead within a month or so, âŠâ The Times added. âA report issued on Monday by the Institute for Science and International Security, a private group that specializes in analyzing the findings of the United Nations agency, concludes that a race over the summer to enrich uranium at 60 percent purity â just below bomb grade â has put Iran in a position to produce the fuel for a single bomb in âas short as one month.’â