Iran lifts ban on UN nuclear inspectors

IAEA says Teheran now ready to answer key questions on past experiments.

jp.services2 (photo credit: )
jp.services2
(photo credit: )
Iran has lifted its ban on visits to a nuclear facility by UN experts and will now allow them to inspect the site, the International Atomic Energy Agency said Friday. It also said Teheran was ready to answer key questions on past experiments that the international community fears could be linked to a weapons program. The IAEA - the UN's nuclear monitor - said Iran promised the concessions earlier this week in a meeting between its officials and a senior delegation from the Vienna-based agency. Years of Iranian stonewalling have left the IAEA unable to ascertain whether Teheran is telling the truth in asserting that it has no nuclear weapons ambitions and that its atomic activities are meant strictly to generate power. Its refusal to cooperate with the agency was the trigger that prompted UN Security Council involvement last year that led to two sets of sanctions. Any decision by the Islamic republic to cooperate with the agency would thus be a major compromise on its part. As such, it could weaken a push by the United States and its Western allies on the council to impose new UN sanctions - even if Teheran continues to defy the council's main demand that it freeze its uranium enrichment program. In talks between Iranian officials and IAEA Deputy Director General Olli Heinonen, "agreement was reached on ... a visit of agency inspectors to the heavy water research reactor at Arak by the end of July," said a statement from the Vienna-based agency. IAEA inspectors were banned from visiting Teheran earlier this year. The two sides also agreed on how "to resolve remaining issues regarding Iran's past plutonium experiments," appointing new inspectors in the place of those banned by Iran earlier this year, finalizing ways of fuller IAEA supervision of uranium enrichment activities, and "clarifying the open issues regarding associated with the score and content of Iran's enrichment program," said the statement. The "open issues" include "uranium contamination found on equipment at a specific location," said the agency, alluding to traces of enriched uranium at a military site - which could indicate links to a weapons program- as "well as studies related to specified projects;" again shorthand for nuclear work that could have military applications.