Iran could resume uranium enrichment within months: IAEA chief
Iran may be able to restart uranium enrichment in a matter of months despite a wave of attacks by the United States and Israel that targeted its nuclear infrastructure, according to the head of the United Nations nuclear watchdog, Rafael Grossi.
The remarks came on Saturday, days after US President Donald Trump insisted this month's attacks had set Iran's nuclear ambitions back 'by decades'.
Speaking to CBS News on Saturday, the director-general of the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) said while key facilities had been hit, some are 'still standing'.
'They can have, you know, in a matter of months, I would say, a few cascades of centrifuges spinning and producing enriched uranium,' Grossi said, adding that it could even be sooner.
He raised concerns over Iran's stockpile of 60 percent enriched uranium, just below weapons grade, which could theoretically produce more than nine nuclear bombs if refined further.
He acknowledged the IAEA does not know whether this stockpile was moved before the bombings or partially destroyed. 'There has to be, at some point, a clarification,' he said.
The Israeli assault began on June 13 with strikes on Iran's nuclear and military sites.
Israel claimed the attacks were designed to prevent Iran from building a nuclear weapon, an accusation Tehran has consistently denied. The US joined the offensive days later, hitting three of Iran's nuclear facilities.
In the wake of the attacks, Iranian lawmakers moved to suspend cooperation with the IAEA and denied Grossi's request to inspect facilities, including the underground enrichment plant at Fordow.
'We need to be in a position to confirm what is there, where it is, and what happened,' Grossi said.
The Iranian Ministry of Health reported at least 627 civilian deaths across the country during the 12-day assault that also saw 28 people killed in Israel in retaliatory strikes launched by Iran, according to Israeli authorities.
On Saturday, Iran's judiciary said an Israeli missile strike on Tehran's Evin Prison on June 23 killed 71 people, including military recruits, detainees and visitors.
Reporting from Tehran, Al Jazeera's Resul Serdar Atas said on Sunday that Iranians believe Israel struck the facility to free the prisoners.
'Definitely the worst way to do that is to bomb the facility itself and kill civilians,' he added. 'This prison is not dedicated to specific crimes. We see political prisoners, journalists, financial offenders, and foreign detainees.
'In 2018, the United States put Evin Prison on its sanctions list, and the European Union did the same in 2021 because of human rights violations.'

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Boston Globe
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A week into the fragile Israel-Iran peace agreement, here's what we still don't know
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