Iran summons UK, France, Germany over UN closed-door meeting
- Iran summoned the envoys of Britain, France, and Germany, claiming a misuse of the Security Council over the topic of its nuclear program.
- The United Nations Security Council plans to hold a closed-door meeting to discuss Iran's growing stockpile of highly enriched uranium, requested by six council members including France and the US.
- Britain, France, and Germany may invoke a snapback mechanism to restore UN sanctions on Iran if needed to prevent nuclear weapon development.
- The International Atomic Energy Agency warned that Iran is enriching uranium to 60% purity, close to the weapons-grade level of 90%.
26 Articles
26 Articles
Protest against nuclear program: Iran appoints German, French and British representatives
Iran reacts with sharp diplomatic protest to a non-public meeting of the UN Security Council on the country's nuclear program. In addition to the German ambassador, representatives of France and Great Britain were also called.
Iran summons EU3 envoys over 'provocative' meeting on its nuclear program
The Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Iran has summoned the envoys of the UK, France and Germany to Tehran over a closed-door meeting of the UN Security Council regarding Tehran's nuclear program.
Iran protests 'provocative' UN meeting on nuclear programme, summons European diplomats
There was "no technical or legal justification" for the meeting, Iranian foreign ministry said in a statement, calling it "provocative and political, in line with the unilateral and nervous approach of the United States"
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