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    11-May-2018

U.S. Says Iran Nuclear Inspections Must Continue

 

AFP

 

The White House wants intrusive inspections of Iran's nuclear sites to continue despite President Donald Trump's withdrawal from a landmark accord on Tehran's atomic program, U.S. officials have told AFP.
 
Days after the U.S. president walked away from a three-year-old deal that mandated rigorous inspections, senior administration officials said monitoring should continue regardless.
 
Known officially as the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action (JCPOA), the deal between Tehran and major world powers forces Iran to open any site to inspectors within 24 days and introduced 24-hour remote surveillance at some sites.
 
Supporters of the Obama-era accord argue it provided "the world's most robust" monitoring regime, allowing access to the Islamic republic's most sensitive nuclear sites.
 
Making his withdrawal announcement on Tuesday, Trump pilloried the accord for lacking mechanisms to "prevent, detect, and punish cheating" or provide immediate access to suspicious military sites.
 
Still, the White House is demanding those inspections, however imperfect, continue under the aegis of the International Atomic Energy Agency, the U.N. nuclear watchdog.
 
"We expect Iran will continue to implement the Additional Protocol and cooperate with the IAEA whether or not the JCPOA remains in place," one senior administration official said.
 
A second official confirmed to AFP on Thursday that Washington still wanted the inspections.
 
Other signatories to the Iran deal -- including Tehran, China and European powers -- have vowed to press ahead with the agreement's implementation.
 
But officials are privately skeptical about how long it can survive, particularly if the United States imposes sanctions on European companies doing business in Iran.
 
And non-proliferation experts have warned that a vital window into Iran's nuclear activities could soon be lost.
 
"If the agreement collapses, Iran is under no obligation to implement any of these provisions, either the Additional Protocol or the deal-specific measures," said Kelsey Davenport, director for nonproliferation policy at the Arms Control Association.
 
"The nuclear deal with Iran put the country's program under a microscope," she told AFP, saying the measures serve as "an early warning system that will set off alarm bells if Iran tries to cheat on its commitments or conduct illicit activities."
 
Since the nuclear accord was reached in 2015, the IAEA has carried out hundreds of inspections inside Iran.
 
That includes monitoring at Fordo, an underground fuel enrichment plant inside a base used by Iran's powerful Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps.
 
The IAEA has so far confirmed that Iran is adhering to its "nuclear-related commitments" although the U.S. administration questions that conclusion.
 
"You cannot say that Iran is in compliance unless you are 100 percent certain that the IAEA and our intelligence are infallible," said U.S. national security advisor John Bolton.
 
Trump has described the agreement as "the worst deal in history" and vowed to renegotiate it.
 
He has also warned that Iran will be punished if it returns to military-scale uranium enrichment.
 
"If the regime continues its nuclear aspirations, it will have bigger problems than it has ever had before," Trump said.
 

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