Iran Invites IAEA Team Over Contested Nuclear Plans

Larijani (right) with el-Baradei on June 22 (Fars) June 25, 2007 -- The United Nations' nuclear watchdog says Iran has invited it to send a team to Tehran to agree how to resolve questions about Iran's contested atomic program.

Melissa Fleming, a spokeswoman for the International Atomic Energy Agency, said the invitation was issued by Ali Larijani, Tehran's chief nuclear negotiator, in talks June 24 with IAEA head Muhammad el-Baradei.


She said the IAEA intended to send a team "as early as practicable."


The UN Security Council first imposed limited sanctions on Iran in December and expanded them slightly in March over Iran’s refusal to suspend uranium enrichment


The United States, Britain, Russia, France, Germany, and China are discussing a third round of Security Council penalties.


Iran says its campaign to enrich uranium for nuclear fuel is solely designed to generate electricity.


But suspicions persist in the West that Iran is secretly trying to build atomic bombs, since Tehran hid sensitive nuclear research from the IAEA for almost 20 years and has stonewalled investigations since.


(AP, Reuters, AFP)

RFE/RL Iran Report

RFE/RL Iran Report


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