Iran nuclear deal

Iran: ‘Terrorist attacks’ on nuclear facilities behind move of centrifuge machines

Reuters

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Iran: ‘Terrorist attacks’ on nuclear facilities behind move of centrifuge machines

IRAN NUCLEAR DEAL. In this file photo, International Atomic Energy Agency Director General Rafael Grossi speaks during a news conference at an IAEA Board of Governors meeting in Vienna, Austria, on September 13, 2021.

Leonhard Foeger/Reuters

According to UN nuclear watchdog chief Rafael Grossi, Iran had moved a new workshop at Natanz that makes parts for centrifuges for uranium enrichment to an underground location

The relocation of a significant part of centrifuge machines to a safer location was due to a “terrorist attack” against Iran’s Karaj nuclear site, the spokesman for the Atomic Energy Organization of Iran was quoted as saying on Friday, April 29.

UN nuclear watchdog chief Rafael Grossi said on Thursday, April 28, that Iran had moved a new workshop at Natanz that makes parts for centrifuges for uranium enrichment to an underground location.

The workshop uses machines from a now-closed facility at Karaj, west of Tehran, that last June suffered what Iran says was a sabotage attack by Israel.

“Due to the terrorist operation against the TESA Karaj complex, we had to tighten security and relocate a significant part of the centrifuge machines to a safer location,” Behrouz Kamalvandi, spokesman for the Atomic Energy Organization of Iran, was quoted as saying by Iranian media.

He blamed the lack of attention shown by the International Atomic Energy Agency for Israeli “vicious operations” against Iran’s nuclear facilities.

The IAEA informed its member states two weeks ago that Iran had moved the machines to Natanz without specifying where at the sprawling site.

Grossi told a news conference on Thursday that the workshop had been set up in “one of the halls” of the underground fuel enrichment plant. He did not elaborate on the reasons for the move, but diplomats say the plant is roughly three floors below ground, possibly to protect it from potential air strikes.

Over the past year, Iran and the United States have engaged in fitful, indirect talks in Vienna to revive a 2015 nuclear deal that then-President Donald Trump reneged on in 2018 and that Iran, in turn, began violating in 2019.

Under the 2015 deal, Iran agreed to limit its nuclear program in return for relief from economic sanctions.

While they appeared close to resurrecting the deal in March, talks stalled over last-minute Russian demands and whether Washington might drop Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps from its Foreign Terrorist Organization list. – Rappler.com

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