Tehran rejects use of IAEA report as ‘tool of political pressure’

Iran on Saturday denounced a report by the UN nuclear agency about access to the country’s nuclear sites, saying that if the agency wants to be part of a diplomatic solution, it must refrain from turning a technical report into a tool of political pressure.
Tehran was engaged in discussions with Washington about its nuclear program when the United States and Israel attacked it on February 28, sparking war in the region.
Israel had previously struck Iran in June 2025, also while Washington and Tehran were engaged in nuclear negotiations, with Washington joining with later strikes before a ceasefire was declared.
During both conflicts, Iranian nuclear sites were bombed repeatedly.
"If the agency wants to be part of a diplomatic solution, it must refrain from turning a technical report into a tool of political pressure," Deputy Foreign Minister Kazem Gharibabadi wrote on X.
In a confidential report seen by AFP on Thursday, the Iran International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) claimed that the lack of access to nuclear sites in Iran constitutes a "proliferation concern.”
"While the agency acknowledged that the military attacks on Iran's nuclear facilities and sites have created an unprecedented situation, it is critical for the agency to conduct verification activities in Iran without delay," the IAEA said in the report.
The IAEA has never condemned the Israeli-American strikes on Iranian nuclear sites.
Gharibabadi on Saturday said the Israeli-American strikes are "not only a violation of Iran's sovereignty," but also "a direct blow to nuclear safety.”
"One cannot bomb safeguarded facilities, destroy the access and safety necessary for inspections, and then use the consequences of that very attack as a grievance against Iran," he argued.
Gharibabadi added that the agency cannot simultaneously report the effects of military attacks, overlook the responsibility of those who carried them out, and ask Iran to pay the technical and political cost of the insecurity created by the aggressors.
“This is neither verification nor confidence-building,” he said.
Western countries, led by the US and Israel accuse Tehran of seeking to acquire nuclear weapons. Iran denies having any such ambitions.

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