Iran refuses to allow the Atomic Energy Agency to inspect its nuclear facilities damaged by the war

Declared Iran will not allow To the International Atomic Energy Agency by entering Its nuclear facilities were bombed during the last war with Israel before a concrete agreement was reached.
Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araqchi said in an interview published on his Telegram channel: "The facilities that were attacked have their own status, and until a decision is made and a conclusion is reached between us, the IAEA and others, cooperation is not possible.".
And in the interview with the agency "Online news" According to reports conducted before the International Atomic Energy Agency adopted a resolution demanding that Iran be granted access to the facilities, Araqchi did not explain what such an agreement might entail.
Unwise report
The Iranian foreign minister added: "They came, they attacked, they left, and now the agency comes to prepare a report for them on what was attacked, what happened and the extent of the damage is not possible, and would clearly not be wise."
In mid-June, Israel launched an unprecedented bombing campaign against Iran, which led to the outbreak of a 12-day war, in which the United States briefly participated by launching strikes on three major Iranian nuclear facilities.
Following the war, Tehran suspended its cooperation with the International Atomic Energy Agency and restricted the access of its inspectors to the sites that were bombed, accusing it of bias due to its failure to condemn the strikes.
In September, Iran and the International Atomic Energy Agency agreed on a new framework for cooperation, but after weeks Tehran canceled it following the activation of Britain, France and Germany. "Trigger mechanism" Which led to the re-imposition of UN sanctions lifted under the expired 2015 nuclear agreement.
War disrupts nuclear talks
The war disrupted high-level nuclear talks between Tehran and Washington that began in April, during which the two sides disagreed over Iran’s right to enrich uranium, an issue that Tehran considers an inherent right.
Since the war, Iran has repeatedly said that it is open to resuming the talks, but only if they are held in accordance with "par"
Abbas Araghchi said during the interview that the American demands remain "Harmful to our national interests"ruling out any talks regarding his country’s missile program or… "Its defensive capabilities" The other.
He described the talks with European governments as "It is no longer useful" After activating it "Trigger mechanism".
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