NOTHING HAS CHANGED: IAEA Chief Warns: Iran Still Blocking Inspectors From Bombed Nuclear Sites
IAEA Director General Rafael Grossi revealed that his agency’s teams remain shut out of Iran’s primary nuclear complexes—Natanz, Isfahan, and Fordow—sites that were struck during American military operations in June. Speaking with the Austrian outlet Die Presse, as cited by Middle East Monitor, Grossi noted that while some inspectors are still physically present in Iran, their work at these heavily damaged locations has been halted since the attacks.
Grossi described the aftermath bluntly, saying, “The main facilities suffered extensive damage, and inspections were impossible for security reasons.” He confirmed that access to Natanz, Isfahan, and Fordow “remains unavailable,” emphasizing that the IAEA still has no ability to perform its technical monitoring at those sites.
The situation spiraled after mid-June, when Israel initiated a sweeping aerial assault on Iranian targets, triggering nearly two weeks of warfare. The United States entered the conflict briefly, launching coordinated strikes on several Iranian nuclear installations. In response, Tehran cut off cooperation with the IAEA, accusing the agency of taking sides and refusing to denounce the strikes—moves that effectively shut down all post-attack inspection efforts.
Efforts to restore oversight collapsed further when a September accord between Iran and the IAEA—meant to revive site access and restart uranium tracking—was tossed aside by Tehran. The agreement was scrapped after the E3 (Britain, France, and Germany) reinstated UN sanctions that had been lifted under the 2015 nuclear agreement.
Iran’s Foreign Minister, Abbas Araghchi, has since doubled down on the government’s position that no IAEA personnel will be allowed into the bombed-out facilities unless a new, explicit arrangement is crafted. “The facilities that were attacked have their own story, and until a decision is made and a conclusion is reached between us, the IAEA and others, cooperation is not possible,” Araghchi said.
Despite the deadlock, Grossi said last week that the UN agency is determined to reestablish full interaction with Tehran. He stressed that the IAEA aims to “restore continuity of knowledge” and regain comprehensive access to Iran’s nuclear program to verify what has taken place in the months since inspectors were barred.
{Matzav.com}
