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May 27, 2012
 
 
 
 
 
 

IAEA chief ElBaradei rejects Iranian claim nuclear deal has no guarantees

27 November 2009 / ,
The UN nuclear watchdog chief on Thursday criticized Iran’s blockage of a plan to divest it of possible nuclear bomb material as “disappointing.”
Under the deal drafted by Mohamed ElBaradei, Iran would send 75 percent of its low-enriched uranium (LEU) to Russia and France. There it would be made into special fuel for a Tehran reactor making medical materials, which will run out next year. But the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) chief’s proposal, aimed at dispelling fears Iran could secretly derive bomb material from LEU, has foundered over Iran’s insistence on giving up no LEU until the reactor fuel reaches its soil.

This would defeat the goal of six world powers -- Britain, France, the United States, Germany, Russia and China -- of cutting Iran’s LEU reserves to less than the quantity needed to fashion a nuclear warhead, if refined to high purity.

    ElBaradei rejected Iran’s assertions the deal lacks guarantees it will get the fuel in the end, a stance Western powers regard as stalling and a tacit admission its LEU will not be used for electricity generation, as Tehran insists. ”In view of the degree of mutual mistrust, it has extensive built-in guarantees, consisting of the IAEA taking custody of the (LEU) until it returned to Iran in the form of fuel,” he told a meeting of the agency’s 35-nation Board of Governors, his last before he retires on Monday after 12 years in office. ElBaradei noted that as an alternative, he had proposed transferring the LEU to a neutral third country such as Turkey, “which has the confidence of all parties,” and remain there under IAEA supervision until Iran gets the reactor fuel. “I am disappointed that Iran so far has not agreed to the original proposal or alternative modalities, both of which I believe are balanced and fair and would greatly alleviate the concerns relating to Iran’s nuclear program.” Vienna Reuters

 
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