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According to the United Nations Atomic Energy Agency, IAEA, Iran has now allowed ten times the amount of enriched uranium as the nuclear deal. This stems from an IAEA report released in Vienna on Friday. According to the estimate, the country ruled by Shiite clerics now has more than 2.1 tons of enriched uranium. In the 2015 Vienna Agreement, which supposedly prevents Iran from building an atomic bomb, Tehran agreed to meet an upper limit of around 200 kilograms of pure uranium. After the United States pulled out of the nuclear deal in 2018, Iran no longer meets all the requirements of the deal.
However, the IAEA reported Friday that Tehran had kept its promise after a long dispute and granted inspectors access to one of the two allegedly secret nuclear sites. The second floor will also be examined throughout the month. Iran is said to have stored nuclear material at the two locations in Tehran and Isfahan. The Iranian nuclear organization denies this and had long rejected the IAEA’s request for access. The United States had cited Tehran’s behavior as evidence that Iran could not be trusted.
In the fight to determine the fate of the nuclear deal, the United States recently announced that it would force the reinstatement of all UN sanctions from pre-deal times. The remaining partners in the deal, Germany, France, Russia, Great Britain and China, deny the United States the right to do so because the government of President Donald Trump withdrew from the nuclear deal in 2018. At the beginning of the week, representatives of the states They emphasized that they would continue to adhere to it, but also warned Iran to keep its promises.