Don't exploit damning nuclear report, Iran warns Europe
Iran has warned the UK and other European powers it would retaliate if they 'exploit' a UN report alleging that Tehran has failed to declare important details about its nuclear programme.
The International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) said Iran had omitted details about nuclear material and nuclear-related activities across three locations in the country.
The nuclear watchdog added that Iran had increased production of highly enriched uranium to up to 60 per cent – uranium needs to be enriched to 90 per cent for atomic weapons.
In December, the UK, France, Germany and the US reportedly planned on submitting a draft resolution to the 35 members of the IAEA's board at its meeting on June 9.
The three European powers threatened to reimpose sanctions on Iran if the country did not 'de-escalate its nuclear programme to create the political environment conducive to meaningful progress and a negotiated solution'.
Abbas Araghchi, Iran's foreign minister, said he had told Rafael Grossi, the IAEA chief, that Tehran would 'respond to any inappropriate action by the European parties' in light of the report, and warned them not to 'exploit' it to 'advance their political objectives'.
According to the report, Iran's total amount of enriched uranium now exceeds 45 times the limit authorised by a landmark agreement between world powers in 2015. While Iran is only allowed to produce up to 300 kilograms (661.4lbs) of enriched uranium, they are estimated to have 9,247.6kg (20,387.5lbs).
It added that Iran did not 'declare nuclear material and nuclear-related activities at three undeclared locations in Iran, specifically, Lavizan-Shian, Varamin and Turquzabad'.
It said: 'These three locations, and other possible related locations, were part of an undeclared structured nuclear programme carried out by Iran until the early 2000s ... some activities used undeclared nuclear material.'
The report said that Iran now possesses 408.6 kg (900.8lbs) enriched uranium up to 60 per cent purity and that Tehran has 'repeatedly either not answered or not provided technically credible answers to the agency's questions, and has sanitised locations as listed in this report, which has impeded agency verification activities'.
Iran is now 'the only non-nuclear-weapon state to produce such material', which was a cause of 'serious concern' , the report said.
According to the IAEA, if Iran were to further enrich the uranium it currently has to 90 per cent purity, they would have enough to produce 10 nuclear bombs.
Donald Trump, the US president, has repeatedly threatened to bomb Iran's nuclear facilities if diplomacy fails to resolve a decades-long dispute over Tehran's nuclear programme.
Karoline Leavitt, the White House press secretary, said Washington had sent a 'detailed and acceptable proposal' to Iran and it was in 'their best interest to accept it'.
Broaden your horizons with award-winning British journalism. Try The Telegraph free for 1 month with unlimited access to our award-winning website, exclusive app, money-saving offers and more.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Bloomberg
18 minutes ago
- Bloomberg
Europe Mulls Speeding Up Trade Retaliation Against the US
Welcome to the Brussels Edition, Bloomberg's daily briefing on what matters most in the heart of the European Union. The EU is signaling it may accelerate retaliatory measures against the US if President Donald Trump follows through on his tariff threats, including a new 50% levy on steel and aluminum imports. The Commission said the tariff hike — from an originally planned 25% — is jeopardizing ongoing efforts to reach an agreement. A commission spokesperson said yesterday that if no solution is reached, both existing and potentially additional EU counter-measures will kick in on July 14 — or even before if the need arises. The EU's trade czar Maros Sefcovic will meet with US Trade Representative Jamieson Greer tomorrow in Paris.


New York Times
27 minutes ago
- New York Times
Poland Just Sent an Ominous Signal to the World
It wasn't a particularly memorable photograph. The image, which briefly circulated around the internet a few weeks ago, showed President Trump in the Oval Office beside Karol Nawrocki, a nationalist candidate in Poland's presidential election. Mr. Nawrocki looked, frankly, a little star-struck — like a tourist who had managed to snap a picture with a celebrity. We could find no footage of a conversation, no record of an exchange. Just a photo of two men awkwardly giving thumbs-ups. In hindsight, it was more important than it looked. On Sunday MAGA won in Poland. After voters rejected Trumpist candidates in recent elections in Canada, Australia and Romania — enough to suggest an international anti-Trump bump — Polish voters went the other way. Mr. Nawrocki, a conservative historian and a former boxer, narrowly defeated Rafal Trzaskowski, the liberal mayor of Warsaw, who was backed by Prime Minister Donald Tusk in a runoff election. Just two short years after electing Mr. Tusk, Poland has once again swung right. Like the U.S. election in 2024, it was a bruising reminder that populism is resilient and sticky, and that liberal democracy has yet to find a reliable formula to defeat it. For Poland's liberals, everything was on the line. In 2023 Mr. Tusk's centrist party, Civic Platform, managed to unseat the far-right Law and Justice Party in parliamentary elections — but only just, in a coalition. Mr. Tusk promised to 'chase away the darkness,' and Poland was cited as an example of a democratic comeback. The reality was more ambivalent: Law and Justice had won the most votes for any single party, and still had its ally Andrzej Duda as president. A party that had openly violated the constitution, subordinated the supreme court and turned the media into a tool of propaganda remained deeply embedded in Poland's political architecture, a permanent challenge to liberal rule. The Tusk government had to govern under the looming threat of Mr. Duda's presidential vetoes as it attempted to reverse the effects of eight years of populist government. It had some successes: It started to restore the independence of the judiciary, which unlocked billions in postpandemic E.U. funds. But many promises went unfulfilled, including liberalizing an abortion law, a key pillar of voter support. Even sympathetic voters grew frustrated. In foreign policy, the stakes were existential. Poland, which shares a long land border with Ukraine, is on NATO's frontier with Russia. The Tusk government increased domestic military spending to almost 5 percent of G.D.P. — the largest proportion of any NATO member, and over and above what Mr. Trump has insisted allies should be spending. It secured nuclear power technology from the United States and realigned its diplomacy toward Brussels. After almost a decade of acrimonious relations with the European Union, Mr. Tusk sought to cast Poland as a reliable European partner once more, summed up in another photo that made the rounds in May, in which Mr. Tusk was in Kyiv with Volodymyr Zelensky, the President of Ukraine, and the leaders of Britain, France and Germany. Poland looked like part of the spine of a new Europe. Now the last two years in Poland, like Joe Biden's four years as president after Mr. Trump's first term in the United States, seem like little more than a liberal intermezzo in which some institutions were restored and some democratic norms reasserted. But voters' deep dissatisfaction and polarization had not simply disappeared; what looked like a restoration was just a narrow opening — and one that may be closing now. Want all of The Times? Subscribe.


Bloomberg
an hour ago
- Bloomberg
Swedish Steelmaker Alleima Sees Pricing as Counter to US Tariffs
The chief executive officer of Swedish steelmaker Alleima AB says the company will not absorb any potential costs from tariffs and will instead focus its efforts on raising prices, as well as targeting specific industries. Speaking in an interview, Goran Bjorkman, 59, said Alleima is doubling down on nuclear tubing offerings having last year decided to expand its steam-tube manufacturing in Sandviken, Sweden. In January, the nuclear division booked two major orders, one worth 530 million kronor ($56 million).