Ukraine and Russia accuse each other of shelling around the station and the IAEA has been trying to set up a safety mechanism to prevent accidents.
Western states have been hesitant to discuss sanctions, while Washington and Tehran held indirect talks for an informal agreement that would have Iran freeze its nuclear program.
Rudik claimed that the situation with Russian-occupying forces surrounding Europe’s largest nuclear power plant Zaporizhzhia in Ukraine “remains very dangerous.”
"Convoy was stopped and gunfire was distinctly heard for a few minutes but the convoy was not in immediate danger. The agency doesn’t have any other information about the incident,” they said.
The deal can’t be saved, which is why our European allies should kill it altogether and move on to a policy that restores deterrence and imposes costs on Iran
Readers of The Jerusalem Post have their say.
The IAEA chief noted that Iran’s stockpile of enriched uranium has risen by over a quarter in three months.
"Iran is continuing to lie to the International Atomic Energy Agency," Netanyahu told his cabinet in televised remarks.
Netanyahu criticized the IAEA for surrendering to pressure from Iran after the IAEA closed some of it's investigations into Iran's nuclear program.
The Jerusalem Post reported earlier this week that the IAEA was close to closing or at least shelving its probe into the undeclared nuclear site.