Ready to assist IAEA investigation into uranium traces: Iran

Iran expresses its readiness to provide further information and access in connection with an investigation into uranium traces at undeclared sites.

Iranian President Ebrahim Raisi meets with IAEA Director General Rafael Grossi in Tehran on March 4, 2023.
Reuters

Iranian President Ebrahim Raisi meets with IAEA Director General Rafael Grossi in Tehran on March 4, 2023.

Iran has given sweeping assurances to the UN nuclear watchdog that it will assist a long-stalled investigation into uranium particles found at undeclared sites and even re-install removed monitoring equipment, the watchdog said. 

The International Atomic Energy Agency and Iran issued a joint statement on Saturday upon IAEA chief Rafael Grossi's return from a trip to Tehran just two days before a quarterly meeting of the agency's 35-nation Board of Governors. 

The statement went into little detail but the possibility of a marked improvement in relations between the two is likely to stave off a Western push for another resolution ordering Iran to cooperate, diplomats said. 

"Iran expressed its readiness to ... provide further information and access to address the outstanding safeguards issues," the joint statement said. 

A confidential IAEA report to member states seen by Reuters said Grossi "looks forward to ... prompt and full implementation of the Joint Statement".

READ MORE: UN nuclear chief hopeful for 'important agreements' during Iran visit

New agreement

Iran is supposed to provide access to information, locations and people, Grossi told a news conference at Vienna airport soon after landing, suggesting a vast improvement after years of Iranian stonewalling. 

Iran would also allow the re-installation of extra monitoring equipment that had been put in place under the 2015 nuclear deal, but then removed last year as the deal unravelled in the wake of the US withdrawal from the deal in 2018 under then-President Donald Trump. 

Follow-up talks in Iran between IAEA and Iranian officials aimed at hammering out the details would happen "very, very soon", Grossi said. 

Asked if all that monitoring equipment would be re-installed, Grossi replied: "Yes". When asked where it would be re-installed, however, he said only that it would be at a number of locations.

READ MORE: Iran's enriched uranium reserves 15 times limit of nuclear deal – IAEA

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