Showing posts with label uranium enrichment. Show all posts
Showing posts with label uranium enrichment. Show all posts

Sunday, 29 June 2025

Iran could resume Uranium enrichment within months after US strikes

Iran could restart uranium enrichment "in a matter of months" following recent US airstrikes on its nuclear facilities, the head of the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) warned, signaling that the damage inflicted by American forces was not sufficient to dismantle Tehran’s nuclear capabilities, reports the Saudi Gazette.

In an interview released Saturday by CBS News, IAEA Director General Rafael Grossi said that despite the scale of the attacks, Iran retains the technological and industrial capacity to resume its nuclear program.

“They can have, in a matter of months, a few cascades of centrifuges spinning and producing enriched uranium or less than that,” Grossi said.

“The damage is severe, but not total.”

On June 22, the United States launched a coordinated assault on Iran’s nuclear infrastructure, dropping six bunker-buster bombs on the Fordo nuclear facility and unleashing dozens of cruise missiles on key sites in Natanz and Isfahan.

The operation followed rising tensions between Iran and Israel and was aimed at halting what Washington described as Iran’s expanding nuclear threat.

In the wake of the strikes, US officials have pushed back on reports suggesting the attacks merely delayed Iran’s progress by several months, rather than eliminating it entirely.

Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi admitted the bombings caused “excessive and serious” damage but insisted that Iran retains core capabilities.

Grossi echoed that concern, saying Iran’s nuclear knowledge and infrastructure cannot be erased.

“You cannot disinvent this,” he noted. “Iran is a very sophisticated country in terms of nuclear technology.”

He also raised alarm over unexplained traces of uranium found at undeclared Iranian sites, saying the IAEA still lacks credible explanations about their origin.

On the issue of Iran’s 408.6-kilogram stockpile of Uranium enriched to 60%, enough to build more than nine nuclear bombs if further enriched, Grossi said, “Some could have been destroyed as part of the attack, but some could have been moved.”

Grossi emphasized the urgency of restoring access for IAEA inspectors, “There has to be at some point a clarification.”

Araghchi announced Saturday that Grossi would be barred from entering Iran, a move swiftly condemned by US Secretary of State Marco Rubio, who called it “a dangerous step toward further nuclear opacity.”

The latest developments come on the heels of a 12-day war between Israel and Iran, which erupted on June 13 after Israeli airstrikes targeted Iranian military, nuclear, and civilian sites. Iran’s Health Ministry reported 606 killed and over 5,300 injured.

In response, Tehran launched drone and missile barrages that killed at least 29 people in Israel and wounded more than 3,400, according to figures from the Hebrew University of Jerusalem.

Saturday, 24 May 2025

Iran: Uranium Enrichment Sovereign Right

Amid the ongoing tensions surrounding Iran’s nuclear program, one crucial fact often gets buried beneath heated political arguments. Iran, as a member of the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT), holds an explicit legal right to enrich uranium for peaceful purposes. 

Any attempts to curtail Iran's legitimate nuclear rights not only contradict international law but also ignore the profound domestic consensus and national resolve to maintain this crucial aspect of Iran's technological and strategic independence.

The continued US insistence that Iran abandon enrichment activities not only contradicts international law but also undermines global diplomatic norms that Washington claims to advocate. Established in 1970, the NPT serves as the cornerstone of global nuclear policy. Article IV clearly states that all signatory nations have the "inalienable right" to develop nuclear technology for peaceful applications without discrimination.

Over the years, Iran has consistently stated that its uranium enrichment is intended solely for energy production and medical purposes. Typically, uranium enrichment levels around 3% to 5% are necessary for nuclear power.

Although, recent reports from the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) indicate Iran has increased its enrichment to higher levels, international law does not explicitly prohibit enrichment itself, provided it remains for civilian purposes. 

US stance

The US claims Iran's enrichment poses a proliferation risk and demands a complete halt. However, this stance is fundamentally political and lacks strong legal justification. 

The Trump administration’s withdrawal from the JCPOA in 2018, despite Iran’s initial full compliance, significantly damaged diplomatic credibility.

Recent indirect negotiations mediated by Oman, along with high-profile visits to West Asia by President Donald Trump and his envoy Steven Witkoff, highlight the complexity of these discussions. 

One of the important points that should be mentioned here is that the US negotiators knew from the outset that uranium enrichment represents an uncompromising "red line" for Iran.

Initiating talks under conditions demanding a halt in enrichment was unrealistic and demonstrates either a lack of understanding or disregard for Iran’s firm diplomatic stance.

Double standards

US credibility is further undermined by apparent double standards. Countries like Brazil, Argentina, Germany, and Japan all have uranium enrichment programs under IAEA supervision without facing similar scrutiny or pressure. Subjecting Iran uniquely to intense pressure based on geopolitical factors weakens the integrity of the global non-proliferation system.

If rights granted by the NPT become selectively applied based on political alliances and agendas, the entire framework could collapse. Nations would see little reason to adhere to non-proliferation and disarmament norms if they perceive that these rights can be arbitrarily revoked.

For Iran, uranium enrichment goes beyond civilian purposes, offering vital strategic leverage and acting as a deterrent. Given regional tensions, Iran views its nuclear capabilities as crucial to national security, making US demands for complete cessation strategically unrealistic and politically impossible.

A sovereign right

Iran’s unwavering pursuit of a peaceful nuclear program is not merely a policy choice; it is an inalienable right, firmly rooted in international law and a matter of national sovereignty.

As a committed signatory to the NPT, Iran has consistently affirmed its entitlement to develop, research, produce, and utilize nuclear energy for peaceful purposes, without discrimination.

This right, enshrined in Article IV of the NPT, is a fundamental principle of global non-proliferation, and Tehran's consistent adherence to its obligations, including rigorous inspections by the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA), underscores its transparency and commitment to a non-military nuclear future.

Demand Iran to abandon its legitimate enrichment activities is to deny a sovereign nation its rightful place in the global scientific and technological community. Iran has invested decades and considerable national resources, including enduring unjust sanctions and the sacrifices of its brightest scientists, to achieve self-sufficiency in its nuclear fuel cycle.

The drive for indigenous capability is not born of a desire for weapons, but from a painful history where external promises of nuclear fuel supply for even medical reactors proved unreliable.

Therefore, the ability to enrich uranium domestically is viewed as a critical guarantee against future dependence and a testament to national resilience.

Iran's peaceful nuclear program is a symbol of its independent spirit and its dedication to scientific progress. It serves as a vital component of its national security doctrine, providing a deterrent against potential aggression without seeking to develop nuclear weapons, which are explicitly forbidden by religious decree from Iran’s Leader.