Deputy foreign minister claims agreement allows Tehran to bar certain individuals from entering country at its discretion
Any international inspector wishing to enter Iran as part of the agreement reached between Tehran and six world powers over the Islamic republic’s nuclear program will need to be approved by the nation’s intelligence agency, Iranian Deputy Foreign Minister Abbas Araqchi has said.
Araqchi told the government-run Islamic Consultative Assembly News Agency (ICANA) that members of the UN’s International Atomic Energy Agency who do not recieve such approval will be barred from entering.
He said such screening was sanctioned by the deal struck between Iran and the international community.
Iran has insisted that IAEA inspectorswould not be given access to military sites, including Parchin, a complex believed by some experts to have been used to test nuclear bomb detonators.
IAEA officials and other experts have charged that Iran has attempted to sanitize the military complex, an allegation that if proven true, could complicate inspections by the UN nuclear watchdog IAEA that are a key provision of the deal.
On Tuesday Iran’s semi-official Fars news agency claimed the head of the IAEA would have been “harmed” if he had disclosed details of Tehran’s alleged nuclear weapons activity to US officials.
According to the report, Tehran officials warned IAEA Director-General Yukiya Amano of retaliation if he revealed specific information outlined in confidential documents handed over by Tehran for the IAEA probe of its nuclear weapons development.
“In a letter to Yukiya Amano, we underlined that if the secrets of the agreement [roadmap between Iran and the IAEA] are revealed, we will lose our trust in the Agency; and despite the US Congress’s pressures, he didn’t give any information to them,” Atomic Energy Organization of Iran spokesman Behrouz Kamalvandi told Iranian lawmakers Monday, Fars said.
“Had he done so, he himself would have been harmed,” he added.
Under the terms of an agreement reached last month between Iran and the IAEA, Iran was required to provide explanations of its past nuclear work by last week, and the UN agency would then have a month to analyze the information.
Iran and IAEA officials are to hold discussions in Tehran in the coming weeks to follow up on remaining questions or concerns.
During Amano’s recent official US visit to brief lawmakers on the accord, the IAEA chief declined to give Congress a copy of the confidential inspection documents handed over by Tehran.
Republican lawmakers criticized Amano for withholding the information, claiming they needed access to the confidential documents to decide whether to vote to approve or disapprove the deal in September.
The handover of documents was said to contain a confidential explanation that is unlikely to veer from previous Iranian denials of work on weapons.
Amano, who met with members of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, said he had a legal obligation to keep the documents confidential.
“Imagine if a country provides me with confidential information … and I do not honor the commitment, no country will share information with us,” he told reporters after the meeting.
As reported by The Times of Israel