Iran said Monday it would block emergency inspections by the UN nuclear service next week

Iran said Monday it would block emergency inspections by the UN nuclear service next week

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Iran would block emergency inspections by the  UN nuclear service ,If others parties is fail the nuclear deal 2015 Commitments


                      
Iran would block emergency inspections by the UN nuclear service next week ,US President Joe Biden's hopes of reviving the accord.
Iran would block emergency inspections by the UN nuclear service next week ,US President Joe Biden's hopes of reviving the accord.

 DUBAI - Iran said Monday it would block emergency inspections by the UN nuclear service next week if other parties to the 2015 nuclear deal fail to live up to their commitments, questioning US President Joe Biden's hopes of reviving the accord.

 It does not mean ending all inspections by the U.N. nuclear watchdog...All these steps are reversible if the other party changes its path and honours its obligations," he said, alluding to the United States. 

Iran's ambassador to the International Atomic Energy Agency wrote on Twitter on Monday that Tehran had informed the UN watchdog about its plans to end the Atomic Pact Agency's extensive control power next week. Under a law passed by Iran's powerful lawmaker last year, the government should limit IAEA inspections to February 21 only to declare nuclear sites and short-term access to places deemed appropriate for information gathering, canceled if the other party do not fully comply with the transaction. The Biden administration intends to return the United States to an agreement abandoned by his predecessor Donald Trump in 2018.


 Under the deal, Iran has agreed to limit its uranium enrichment program in exchange for lifting sanctions. After Trump resigned and reimposed sanctions, Iran began violating several restrictions on the Sensitive Uranium Enrichment Treaty. 


Now Washington and Tehran disagree on how best to restore the deal, and both sides are urging the other to act first to return to compliance. Despite Iran's public hard line that Washington must take the first step, however, several Iranian officials told Reuters last week that the mounting economic pain of U.S. sanctions may push Tehran to show flexibility on terms for restoring the nuclear deal.

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