Iran says it hopes new UN nuclear chief Grossi will act 'neutrally'
Just a day after his election, Tehran begins to apply pressure on Rafael Grossi, the veteran Argentine diplomat who has been tasked with leading the International Atomic Energy Agency.
Iran said Thursday it hopes the UN nuclear watchdog will act "neutrally" under its new head and vowed to maintain cooperation with its inspectors monitoring a landmark 2015 nuclear deal.
Veteran Argentine diplomat and nuclear expert Rafael Grossi took the helm of the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) on Tuesday following the death of his predecessor, Yukiya Amano of Japan, in July.
The UN agency is tasked with monitoring Tehran's nuclear activities to assess its compliance with the 2015 agreement with major powers, which has been severely undermined by Washington's abandonment of it in May last year.
Iran hopes that during Grossi's tenure, the IAEA "can neutrally and professionally undertake its international responsibilities and sensitive missions," Foreign Ministry spokesman Abbas Mousavi said in a statement.
"Iran is ready to maintain and expand interaction and cooperation with the agency with goodwill and mutual respect," he added.
Tensions with the United States have escalated sharply since it began reimposing crippling unilateral sanctions lifted under the nuclear deal.
The European parties to the deal – Britain, France and Germany – have repeatedly said they are committed to saving the accord, but their efforts have so far borne little fruit.
Tehran has hit back by suspending its compliance with parts of the deal until sanctions relief is restored.
"The path for diplomacy is open... the Europeans and especially the French are still trying to act on their commitments," Mousavi told state television.
Yet the attempts have so far "failed to reach any tangible results" and "if the situation goes on as it is, (Iran) will most probably take the fourth step," he added.
Iran has said it will unveil a fourth package of measures on Monday.
– TIMES/AFP
related news
-
Stories that caught our eye: April 25 to May 1
-
Chinese business interests await gesture from Milei towards Xi
-
Silvina Batakis: IMF betting on Milei because his failure would also be theirs
-
Crowds flock to tomb of Pope Francis, as eyes turn to conclave
-
McEwen weighs Argentina share listing as part of copper unit IPO
-
Francos faces Congress grilling over Milei’s links to '$LIBRA' scam
-
US, Argentina deepen ‘strategic’ ties as top military officer visits
-
Xi is trying to turn world against US as Trump cuts trade deals
-
Kicillof demands IMF probe into Georgieva's pro-Milei comments
-
Ronnie Scott laid to rest at British Cemetery