logo
Europe bears ‘share of the blame' for Israel's attack on Iran

Europe bears ‘share of the blame' for Israel's attack on Iran

Russia Today8 hours ago

European leaders pressured the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) to issue a negative assessment of Iran and 'bear a share of the blame' for Israel's attack on the Islamic Republic, Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov has said.
Israel attacked Iran shortly after the UN nuclear watchdog declared Tehran to be in breach of the Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT), despite Iran's claims its uranium enrichment program is peaceful. The US joined the Jewish state's air campaign to strike Tehran's nuclear sites shortly before Washington announced a ceasefire had been reached between Israel and Iran.
Speaking at the Primakov Forums meeting in Moscow on Tuesday, Lavrov accused European leaders of pressuring the IAEA's director, General Rafael Grossi, into publishing an accusatory report on Iran.
'The Europeans have taken a purely neocolonial position... They were actively preparing Grossi so that he would put the most ambiguously negative formulations into his report,' the top diplomat said.
The UK, France, Germany, and later, the US ran with the IAEA assessment and pushed a resolution through the IAEA Board of Governors that condemned Iran for allegedly violating the NPT, he added.
'A few days later, Israel launched its attacks,' Lavrov said.
The Europeans bear a share of the blame for this happening and for the fact that such attacks were carried out.
This highlights that the West 'exerts very serious influence on international organizations, and has even privatized them to an extent,' Lavrov said, adding that most such bodies are no longer 'guided by the requirement of impartiality.'
Weeks before the escalation, Reuters cited anonymous diplomats as saying that Western powers were pressuring the IAEA to declare Tehran in breach of its NPT obligations, at the height of US-Iran nuclear talks.
Tehran has since accused Grossi of taking sides and turning a blind eye to Israel's attacks on Iran's nuclear energy facilities. Multiple IAEA resolutions state that any use of force against peaceful nuclear facilities is illegal under international law.
Moscow has condemned Israeli and US attacks against Iran as 'illegitimate.' The recent ceasefire, announced by US President Donald Trump on Tuesday, 'can and should be welcomed,' Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov has said. Moscow hopes that it 'proves to be sustainable,' he added.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Russian electricity supplies to China fall 44%
Russian electricity supplies to China fall 44%

Russia Today

timean hour ago

  • Russia Today

Russian electricity supplies to China fall 44%

Moscow's supply of electricity to China saw a major year-over-year drop in the first half of 2025, according to the state-run power exporting company Inter RAO. The decline has been attributed to internal supply restrictions rolled out in response to growing demand in Russia's Far East. Russia is a key electricity supplier to China, the world's number one power consumer. In 2024, the East Asian nation accounted for a third of global power demand, according to global energy think tank Ember Energy. Electricity exports to China have dropped 44% in the first half of the year, Inter RAO CEO Sergey Drevgal told Vedomosti. He also noted that Russia's total electricity exports fell by 17.6% in 2024 to 8.53 billion kilowatt-hours. Speaking with journalists at a briefing during the St. Petersburg International Economic Forum (SPIEF), the company's head highlighted that the major decrease in supplies to the neighboring country had been caused by export restrictions prompted by soaring electricity demand in the Russian Far East and a shortage of hydro resources in eastern hydroelectric reservoirs. 'Given the ongoing restrictions, we are forced to forecast that electricity supplies to China this year will fall below the 2024 level,' Drevgal said. Last year, Russia's power supplies to China amounted to 0.9 billion kilowatt-hours, marking a major decrease compared to the 3.1 billion kilowatt-hours recorded in 2023. Drevgal added that electricity exports to Kazakhstan (the biggest importer of electricity from Russia) and Mongolia are expected to remain high in 2025. The CEO also said that the volume of electricity exported to Kyrgyzstan will directly depend on the transmission capacity of the power grid in neighboring Kazakhstan. He refrained from forecasting the overall volume of electricity exports, saying that the final outcome will depend on a number of factors, including electricity consumption trends in Russia and abroad, price dynamics in domestic and foreign power markets, exchange rates, and other variables.

Peace dialogue with Kiev on hold
Peace dialogue with Kiev on hold

Russia Today

time2 hours ago

  • Russia Today

Peace dialogue with Kiev on hold

Moscow and Kiev are currently working to fully implement the humanitarian portion of their previous agreements, and therefore no negotiations are currently underway on their respective peace roadmaps, Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov has said. Speaking at a regular press briefing on Wednesday, Peskov noted that the exact date of the next round of talks with Kiev would be decided after all previous pledges are fulfilled, referring to prisoner exchanges and the repatriation of slain soldiers. Russia and Ukraine held direct talks in Türkiye last month, resuming a diplomatic process that was paused by Kiev in 2022 after it chose to seek a battlefield victory with Western assistance. DETAILS TO FOLLOW

Spies from EU aspirant arrested in Moscow
Spies from EU aspirant arrested in Moscow

Russia Today

time4 hours ago

  • Russia Today

Spies from EU aspirant arrested in Moscow

The Russian authorities have identified and arrested two Moldovan citizens who have confessed to working for Chisinau's intelligence agency, according to officials. The Federal Security Service (FSB) hid the identities of the two arrested men in footage released alongside its statement on Wednesday, but published photographs of and named their suspected handlers from Moldova's Security and Intelligence Service (SIS). One of the suspected handlers, Alexandru Sirbu, allegedly recruited both men on separate occasions in 2023 and 2024. The other, Adrian Popescu, was reportedly involved in their most recent deployment to Moscow, according to questioning of the suspects released by the FSB. The FSB said the two men arrived in the Russian capital under false identities. The agency also stated that the SIS cooperates with Ukrainian secret services to conduct missions that harm Russian national interests. Moldova, a former Soviet republic, is currently led by pro-Western President Maia Sandu, who also holds Romanian citizenship. Sandu has said that she aims to have the country join the European Union as early as 2028. Under her leadership, the authorities in Chisinau have cracked down on the opposition, including arresting the elected leader of the autonomous Gagauzia region. Sandu was reelected last November in a vote that critics say was manipulated by the government, alleging that opposition candidates were denied a fair opportunity to run for office. Moscow has charged that Sandu is steering Moldova in a dangerous direction, sacrificing national interests to serve Western agendas. In April, the FSB reported the case of a former SIS employee who was expelled from Russia last year after allegedly continuing to work as an undercover agent for Moldovan intelligence.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store