Zürcher Nachrichten - Iran to face censure amid stalled nuclear talks

EUR -
AED 4.270005
AFN 76.153531
ALL 96.410443
AMD 443.754431
ANG 2.08129
AOA 1066.192275
ARS 1674.289959
AUD 1.750445
AWG 2.094307
AZN 1.968402
BAM 1.954365
BBD 2.343349
BDT 142.183154
BGN 1.955899
BHD 0.438317
BIF 3448.557153
BMD 1.162696
BND 1.508653
BOB 8.057084
BRL 6.317275
BSD 1.163531
BTN 104.623179
BWP 15.507214
BYN 3.363643
BYR 22788.846996
BZD 2.340082
CAD 1.609898
CDF 2592.81282
CHF 0.937371
CLF 0.02745
CLP 1076.865824
CNY 8.21282
CNH 8.211153
COP 4486.124055
CRC 568.882291
CUC 1.162696
CUP 30.811451
CVE 110.746738
CZK 24.252856
DJF 206.6344
DKK 7.468324
DOP 74.703469
DZD 151.279058
EGP 55.286442
ERN 17.440444
ETB 180.508946
FJD 2.641414
FKP 0.872948
GBP 0.874144
GEL 3.127523
GGP 0.872948
GHS 13.312683
GIP 0.872948
GMD 85.457629
GNF 10100.923472
GTQ 8.912303
GYD 243.381294
HKD 9.048713
HNL 30.520626
HRK 7.533925
HTG 152.374186
HUF 383.733366
IDR 19380.984213
ILS 3.748638
IMP 0.872948
INR 104.546568
IQD 1523.132121
IRR 48949.513535
ISK 148.802148
JEP 0.872948
JMD 186.1709
JOD 0.824371
JPY 182.38926
KES 150.278812
KGS 101.677509
KHR 4656.598749
KMF 492.982977
KPW 1046.422664
KRW 1708.861565
KWD 0.357111
KYD 0.969563
KZT 600.029421
LAK 25213.068747
LBP 104301.481894
LKR 359.110142
LRD 205.797527
LSL 19.835686
LTL 3.43314
LVL 0.703303
LYD 6.319231
MAD 10.758405
MDL 19.755984
MGA 5220.506172
MKD 61.561421
MMK 2441.715395
MNT 4124.411542
MOP 9.325472
MRU 46.321418
MUR 53.658625
MVR 17.909156
MWK 2019.006349
MXN 21.158397
MYR 4.786235
MZN 74.30812
NAD 19.835687
NGN 1687.417889
NIO 42.74078
NOK 11.801239
NPR 167.392771
NZD 2.011424
OMR 0.447054
PAB 1.163546
PEN 3.910108
PGK 4.940877
PHP 69.122832
PKR 325.962192
PLN 4.227389
PYG 8135.816251
QAR 4.233496
RON 5.089472
RSD 117.449771
RUB 89.760498
RWF 1688.234992
SAR 4.363055
SBD 9.569679
SCR 16.225157
SDG 699.373216
SEK 10.880518
SGD 1.508052
SHP 0.872323
SLE 28.016723
SLL 24381.157382
SOS 664.452601
SRD 44.903911
STD 24065.465424
STN 24.823565
SVC 10.18035
SYP 12855.885117
SZL 19.83494
THB 36.997168
TJS 10.721727
TMT 4.081064
TND 3.41106
TOP 2.799494
TRY 49.45273
TTD 7.880214
TWD 36.2388
TZS 2848.605916
UAH 49.116902
UGX 4121.92025
USD 1.162696
UYU 45.465834
UZS 13963.982292
VES 299.517868
VND 30663.20752
VUV 141.435343
WST 3.238699
XAF 655.475709
XAG 0.0191
XAU 0.000276
XCD 3.142245
XCG 2.09696
XDR 0.814404
XOF 654.598261
XPF 119.331742
YER 277.332112
ZAR 19.832227
ZMK 10465.665909
ZMW 26.906244
ZWL 374.387726
  • JRI

    -0.0190

    13.701

    -0.14%

  • BCC

    0.1900

    72

    +0.26%

  • CMSC

    0.0200

    23.24

    +0.09%

  • NGG

    -0.4400

    74.89

    -0.59%

  • BCE

    -0.1900

    23.15

    -0.82%

  • CMSD

    0.0500

    23.22

    +0.22%

  • SCS

    0.0200

    16.14

    +0.12%

  • RIO

    1.3800

    74.4

    +1.85%

  • RBGPF

    0.7600

    79.11

    +0.96%

  • BTI

    -0.1200

    57.29

    -0.21%

  • GSK

    -1.2000

    47.27

    -2.54%

  • RYCEF

    -0.0500

    14.75

    -0.34%

  • VOD

    0.0000

    12.5

    0%

  • RELX

    0.0600

    39.54

    +0.15%

  • BP

    -0.2300

    35.55

    -0.65%

  • AZN

    -1.4600

    89.82

    -1.63%

Iran to face censure amid stalled nuclear talks
Iran to face censure amid stalled nuclear talks / Photo: ALEX HALADA - AFP/File

Iran to face censure amid stalled nuclear talks

Major European countries and the United States are expected to seek to censure Iran when the UN atomic watchdog meets this week amid stalled talks to revive the 2015 nuclear deal.

Text size:

The resolution drafted by the United States, Britain, France and Germany is a sign of their growing impatience as diplomats warn the window to save the landmark deal is closing.

The International Atomic Energy Agency's Board of Governors meets Monday through Friday in Vienna.

If the resolution urging Iran to "cooperate fully" with the IAEA is adopted, it will be the first motion censuring Iran since June 2020.

Talks to revive the accord started in April 2021 with the aim to bring the United States back into the deal and lift sanctions again and get Iran to scale back its stepped-up nuclear programme.

The 2015 landmark deal -- promising Tehran sanctions relief in exchange for curbs in its nuclear programme -- started to fall apart in 2018 when then president Donald Trump withdrew from it.

Talks to revive the agreement have stalled in recent months.

The coordinator of the talks, the EU's top diplomat Josep Borrell, warned in a tweet this weekend that the possibility of returning to the accord was "shrinking".

"But we still can do it with an extra effort," he said.

- 'Send a message' -

In a report late last month, the IAEA said it still had questions that were "not clarified" regarding traces of enriched uranium previously found at three sites which had not been declared by Iran as having hosted nuclear activities.

Iran has warned "any political action" by the United States and the so-called E3 group of France, Germany and the UK would "provoke without any doubt a proportional, effective and immediate response".

"There is no excuse for Iran's continued failure to provide meaningful cooperation with the agency's investigation," Kelsey Davenport, an expert with the Arms Control Association, told AFP.

"A resolution censuring Iran is necessary to send a message that there are consequences for stonewalling the agency and failing to meet safeguards obligations," she said.

China and Russia, which are also parties to the Iran nuclear deal -- together with Britain, France and Germany -- have warned that any resolution could disrupt the negotiation process.

Russia's ambassador to the UN in Vienna, Mikhail Ulyanov, in a tweet called on the EU to "undertake extra diplomatic efforts".

- In shadow of Ukraine -

But even if the climate is tense, negotiations are unlikely to fall apart, according to Clement Therme, associate researcher at the Rasanah International Institute for Iranian Studies.

"Given the war in Ukraine, the Europeans are not ready to trigger a new crisis with Iran when they are already dealing with a crisis with Russia" which invaded its neighbour in February, he said.

The expert suggested that the resolution would be worded "in a way that does not close the door to further negotiations".

A key sticking point is Tehran's demand for Washington to remove the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps, the ideological arm of Iran's military, from the official US list of terror groups.

US President Joe Biden's administration has refused to do so ahead of tough November midterm elections.

"The political cost Biden will pay for lifting sanctions on the IRGC is high, but it pales in comparison to the threat of a nuclear-armed Iran," Davenport said.

She said Biden's administration "should double down on other creative proposals to get negotiations back on track".

According to the latest IAEA report, the Islamic republic now has 43.1 kilograms (95 pounds) of 60-percent-enriched uranium.

If enriched to 90 percent, this could be used to make a bomb in under 10 days, Davenport warned in a report last week.

"Weaponising would still take one to two years, but that process would be more difficult to detect and disrupt once Iran moved the weapons-grade uranium from its declared enrichment facilities," Davenport said.

Iran has always denied wanting to develop a nuclear weapon.

T.Furrer--NZN