Iran and the IAEA are expected to resume cooperation under agreement backed by Egypt
Iran and the International Atomic Energy Agency agreed on practical steps to resume inspections after cooperation was suspended due to Israeli-US strikes on Iranian nuclear sites in June.
- Iran and the International Atomic Energy Agency signed an agreement in Cairo to pave the way for resuming cooperation, including on ways of relaunching inspections of Iran's nuclear facilities.
- France, Germany and the United Kingdom began the process of reimposing sanctions on Iran over what they deemed non-compliance with a 2015 agreement aimed at preventing Iran from developing nuclear weapons.
- Iran's foreign minister held a call with counterparts in Germany, France, and the UK over their threat to potentially snap back sanctions over Iran's nuclear program.
110 Articles
110 Articles
Iran, IAEA announce agreement on resuming nuclear inspections
Iran and the UN nuclear watchdog said on Tuesday they had reached a deal on resuming inspections at sites including those bombed by the US and Israel, but gave no specifics, and Tehran warned the West that the deal was off if sanctions were reimposed. The agreement, struck between International Atomic Energy Agency chief Rafael Grossi and Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araqchi at a meeting in Cairo, should in principle pave the way for a full re…


Rafael Grossi says he agreed with the Iranian Foreign Minister "on practical ways to resume inspections in Iran" of nuclear activities.
Iranian Chancellor Abbas Araqchi and the director of the organization, Rafael Grossi, agreed “practical modalities” to reactivate the inspections after the June attacks. Egypt acted as mediator
The agency's director called the deal a "step in the right direction, opening the door to diplomacy and stability."
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