Iran's parliament has voted unanimously to suspend cooperation with the IAEA following military strikes from Israel and the U.S. Parliament Speaker Ghalibaf criticized the agency's lack of condemnation towards attacks on Iran's nuclear facilities. The bill mandates future IAEA inspections be approved by Iran's Supreme National Security Council and requires endorsement from the Guardian Council. The conflict escalated with U.S. airstrikes, which allegedly damaged Iran's nuclear program, though subsequent reports indicated they were not entirely effective. The IAEA seeks to resume inspections of Iran's facilities to ensure oversight.
The International Atomic Energy Agency, which refused to even marginally condemn the attack on Iran's nuclear facilities, put its international credibility up for auction.
The Atomic Energy Organisation of Iran will suspend its cooperation with the IAEA until the security of our nuclear facilities is guaranteed.
While the facilities sustained significant damage, they were not completely destroyed, estimating the programme had only been set back by several months.
IAEA has called for renewed access to Iranian facilities and its director has already written to Iran to discuss resuming inspections.
Collection
[
|
...
]