UN inspectors hold ‘very productive’ nuclear talks with Iran

Tehran seen to be engaging more following election of moderate president Rouhani

The UN nuclear watchdog and Iran have held “very productive” talks on how to advance a long-blocked investigation into Iranian atomic activities.   Iran is seen to be engaging more openly on the topic of its nuclear ambitions since  the election president Hassan Rouhani.  Photograph: Adrees Latif/Reuters.
The UN nuclear watchdog and Iran have held “very productive” talks on how to advance a long-blocked investigation into Iranian atomic activities. Iran is seen to be engaging more openly on the topic of its nuclear ambitions since the election president Hassan Rouhani. Photograph: Adrees Latif/Reuters.

The UN nuclear watchdog and Iran have held "very productive" talks on how to advance a long-blocked investigation into Iranian atomic activities and will meet again in Tehran next month, they said in a rare joint statement today.

The relatively upbeat announcement by Iran and the International Atomic Energy Agency may further buoy hopes for a negotiated solution to the international standoff over Tehran's nuclear ambitions after the June election of moderate president Hassan Rouhani, who is seeking to reduce tension with the West.

The UN agency wants to resume an investigation, long stymied by Iranian non-cooperation, into what it calls the “possible military dimensions” of the Islamic Republic’s nuclear programme. Tehran says it is enriching uranium solely for electricity generation and medical treatments.

The IAEA and Iran "had a very productive meeting on past and present issues", Tero Varjoranta, the agency's deputy director general in charge of nuclear inspections, told reporters today at the end of the two-day session in Vienna.

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Iranian ambassador Reza Najafi said Tehran presented new ideas to overcome the dispute, which revolves around the UN watchdog's suspicions that Iran researched how to build nuclear bombs despite being part of a global non-proliferation treaty.

"I believe that, with the submission of these new proposals by Iran, we have been able to open a new chapter of cooperation," he said, standing next to Mr Varjoranta.

Their conciliatory comments marked a change in tone after a string of meetings since early 2012 failed to yield a deal giving the IAEA access to sites, files and officials relevant to its investigation.

The IAEA talks are distinct from Iran’s negotiations with world powers, but both diplomatic tracks centre on suspicions that Tehran may be seeking the capability to assemble nuclear bombs behind the facade of a civilian atomic energy programme.

Deputy foreign minister Abbas Araqchi said he had put forward proposals to IAEA director general Yukiya Amano and pledged a "new approach" in dealings with the UN agency. But he gave no specifics.

Today’s joint statement said: “Iran presented new proposals of practical measures as a constructive contribution to strengthen our cooperation and dialogue with a view to future resolution of all outstanding issues.”

Expectations for this week’s Vienna talks, the first since Mr Rouhani, a pragmatic, took office, had been relatively high.

Diplomats believed Iran might soon offer concessions, perhaps by permitting UN inspectors to visit its Parchin military base southeast of Tehran - long an IAEA priority.

Asked whether he expected a deal to be clinched at the next meeting, set for November 11th in the Iranian capital, Mr Varjoranta said: “We expect to get our work done as soon as possible”.

He added in response to a question about Parchin, where the IAEA suspects nuclear-relevant explosives tests might have taken place a decade ago: “We are addressing all present and past issues. Parchin is of course one of these things.”

Iran says Parchin is a conventional military installation.

Iran’s defiance of U.N. resolutions demanding that it curb nuclear activity with military applications, and its lack of transparency with the IAEA, have drawn increasingly tough sanctions. These have cut its daily oil sales earnings by 60 per cent since 2011.

Reuters