U.S., allies critical of new «deal» on Iran’s nuclear program
White House Press Secretary Robert Gibbs issued a statement acknowledging the effort, but he added that like Britain and France , the U.S. would continue negotiations at the U.N. Security Council on a resolution imposing tougher sanctions on Iran .
"The proposal announced in Tehran must now be conveyed clearly and authoritatively to the IAEA before it can be considered by the international community," Gibbs said, referring to the U.N. International Atomic Energy Agency . "Given Iran’s repeated failure to live up to its own commitments, and the need to address fundamental issues related to Iran’s nuclear program, the United States and international community continue to have serious concerns."
It would be a "positive step" if Iran transferred low-enriched uranium off its soil, Gibbs said. He noted, however, the Iranian declaration Monday that it intends to continue producing low-enriched uranium in violation of U.N. Security Council resolutions after an October deal collapsed.
Gibbs also said that the Iranian-Brazilian-Turkish declaration was "vague" about whether Iran would meet with the so-called P5+1 — the United States , Russia , China , Britain , France and Germany — to discuss the international community’s unresolved concerns about the Iranian nuclear program as called for by the agreement that fell apart in October.
It wasn’t immediately clear whether Russia and China , which have opposed harsher sanctions, would use the new deal to delay the process. All five permanent members of the Security Council — Britain , China , France , Russia and the U.S. — have veto power.
Turkey and Brazil , which currently hold rotating Security Council seats, brokered the deal in a bid to prevent the crisis from worsening.
"My expectation is that after this declaration there will not be a need for sanctions," Turkish Prime Minister Tayyip Erdogan said in Tehran , Reuters reported.
Erdogan and Brazilian President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva clinched the deal in talks with Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad .
Under the agreement, Iran would ship 1,200 kilograms, about 2,640 pounds, of uranium enriched to about 3.5 percent to Turkey for storage. In return, Iran would be entitled to receive from Russia and France about 265 pounds of uranium enriched to 20 percent to fuel a research reactor in Tehran that’s used to produce medical isotopes.
"Let us not deceive ourselves, a solution to the (low-enriched uranium) question, if it happens, would do nothing to settle the problem posed by the Iranian nuclear program," French government spokesman Bernard Valero said in a statement.
He said that "at the heart" of the issue was Iran’s refusal to suspend uranium enrichment at its plant at Natanz, its continued construction of a heavy-water reactor at Arak and questions about the program’s history, including alleged research projects with military applications.
Britain said the agreement failed to address concerns that Iran’s uranium enrichment program was part of a covert nuclear-weapons program, a charge that Tehran denies. Iran kept the program secret from U.N. inspectors for 18 years.
" Iran has an obligation to assure the international community of its peaceful intentions," Alistair Burt , a junior British foreign minister, said in a statement. "The IAEA has said it is unable to verify this."
"That is why we have been working with our . . . partners on a sanctions resolution in the Security Council . Until Iran takes concrete actions to meet those obligations, that work must continue," Burt said.
The European Union said in a statement that the agreement fell short of what was needed. "This agreement, while being a positive step in the right direction, does not fully address the issue of Iran’s nuclear program," it said.
The accord, details of which were announced by state-run Iranian media, is similar to the deal the IAEA proposed last October, under which Iran also would have shipped 1,200 kilograms of uranium enriched to 3.5 percent out of the country.
The material, which was about two-thirds of the low-enriched uranium that Iran had at the time, would have been further enriched to 20 percent, manufactured into fuel rods for the Tehran reactor and then sent back to Iran .
That accord fell apart after Iran began demanding changes in it. In the meantime, it’s continued producing low-enriched uranium in violation of repeated U.N. demands that it suspend its program. It now has an estimated 2,300 kilograms — more than 5,000 pounds — of low-enriched uranium, so the amount it would send to Turkey under the new deal would be about half of its stockpile.
David Albright of the Institute for Science and International Security , a former U.N. nuclear inspector who tracks the Iranian program, said it would take Iran only about a year to produce the same amount of low-enriched uranium it would send to Turkey .
He said that other parts of the deal also were problematic, including a provision that would allow Iran to declare unilaterally that the agreement was being violated and reclaim its low-enriched uranium from Turkey .
The agreement "appears to just be an attempt to derail (new) sanctions," he said.
Americas
US seeks $672 million for removal of Iranian uranium, nuclear inspections
Trump: Iran imposing fees on Hormuz would block deal with US
European allies let US down during Iran conflict, Trump says
Trump says Iran making 'very big' concessions
NEWS FEED
US seeks $672 million for removal of Iranian uranium, nuclear inspections
Trump: Iran imposing fees on Hormuz would block deal with US
Qatar out of World Cup after losing 3-1 to Bosnia
Switzerland beats Canada 2-1 to win World Cup Group B
European allies let US down during Iran conflict, Trump says
Today marks Ashura in Azerbaijan
Lent.az marks its 18th anniversary
Trump says Iran making 'very big' concessions
Iran blames US for regional instability
Rubio: Upcoming technical talks with Iran will be at expert level, start June 30
Zelenskyy says drone signal repeaters in Belarus have been switched off
US Treasury Department has removed seven individuals and two vessels from sanctions lists against Russia
Araghchi discusses US talks with Saudi foreign minister
Ghalibaf: Azerbaijan-Iran relations have seen greater development over the past year
Sahiba Gafarova meets Speaker of Iran's Parliament
Meeting held with delegation from Pakistan National Defense University
Ships start sailing through Hormuz under UN evacuation scheme, agency says
Iraqi President congratulates Azerbaijani leader on Independence Day
Speakers of Azerbaijani and Turkish parliaments meet, stress importance of Azerbaijan-Türkiye strategic alliance - UPDATED
Ebola outbreak is still outpacing response, WHO's Tedros says
Helicopter crashes in Russia's Krasnodar region
Exchange of accusations erupts between Iranian and Yemeni representatives
Azerbaijan’s Prime Minister meets with Speaker of Türkiye’s Grand National Assembly
Azerbaijani MFA: France continues to pursue outdated and one-sided political approaches
Ghalibaf: Iran learned who its friends and enemies were during the war, Azerbaijan stood by Iran
CENTCOM airstrike in Syria kills senior ISIS leader
Azerbaijan Railways showcases Azerbaijan’s transit and logistics potential at Transport Logistic China 2026
President Ilham Aliyev received delegation led by Speaker of Iran’s Islamic Consultative Assembly
Drone attempting to violate Azerbaijan’s border neutralized - PHOTO
Azerbaijan extradites internationally wanted individual to Kyrgyzstan
Iran-Gulf reconciliation talks expected to be held in Saudi Arabia, diplomat says
Jeyhun Bayramov travels to Poland to attend Ukraine Recovery Conference
Israel, Lebanon discussing pilot scheme for handover of territory
Ukraine returns sailors from ship detained by Iranian security forces
Erdoğan says one-on-one meeting with Trump likely at NATO Summit
Trump: Negotiations will end immediately if Iran charges ships passing through the Strait of Hormuz
Azerbaijan assumes chairmanship of the Parliamentary Union of OIC member states - UPDATED
AZAL’s first Airbus A321neo delivered in Hamburg - PHOTO
AZAL: New Airbus A321neo can be safely operated on any route - VIDEO
Iran says access to attacked nuclear sites depends on final US deal
Katz vows IDF won’t withdraw from south Lebanon ‘even if there’s an American demand’
Media representatives visit Airbus production facility in Hamburg - PHOTO
President Ilham Aliyev received delegation led by Speaker of Grand National Assembly of Türkiye
Azerbaijan's insurance market grows by nearly 2% this year
Erdoğan: Israel has been doing everything it can for 10 days to undermine a US-Iran agreement
Lavrov: Diplomatic solution to Ukraine crisis remains possible
France confirms first Ebola case in doctor returning from DR Congo mission
Tehran's Mehrabad Airport to close due to Ali Khamenei's funeral ceremonies
Ukraine hits two airfields and air defence systems in Crimea, including Pantsir-S1 units
Drones strike major Russian gas processing plant 1,500 km from Ukraine