However, Iran still will keep all recordings from the cameras - part of another ongoing dispute between the agency and Tehran sparked by the nuclear deal's collapse. The threatening article ended with a 2013 quote from Iranian Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei (pictured in July this year), who said Iran would 'destroy Tel Aviv and Haifa' if Israel 'makes a mistake' and conducts a military strike against Iran
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Tehran has offered no evidence to support the claim, though it's another sign of the friction between inspectors and Iran.Īs part of Wednesday's deal, the IAEA said it would 'make available a sample camera and related technical information to Iran for analysis by its relevant security and judiciary officials, in the presence of the agency inspectors.' Grossi also dismissed as 'simply absurd' an Iranian allegation that saboteurs used the IAEA's cameras in the attack on the Karaj centrifuge site. 'It will give you the illusion of the real image. what you have is a very blurred image,' Grossi said. 'If the international community through us, through the IAEA, is not seeing clearly how many centrifuges or what is the capacity that they may have. In an interview Tuesday with the AP, Grossi warned that limited access to Karaj hurt international efforts to monitor Iran's program. Tehran blamed the Karaj assault on Israel amid a widening regional shadow war since former President Donald Trump unilaterally withdrew America from Iran's landmark nuclear accord with world powers. Iranian Foreign Minister Hossein Amirabdollahian reportedly said earlier Wednesday that Iran had 'reached a good agreement' with the IAEA.ĭeputy Secretary General of the European External Action Service (EEAS) Enrique Mora and Iran's chief nuclear negotiator Ali Bagheri Kani with delegations wait for the start of a meeting of the JCPOA Joint Commission in Vienna, Austria December 9, 2021 The IAEA said the cameras would be reinstalled at Karaj in the 'coming days.'
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'This is important for verification under the Iran nuclear deal, and work will continue to address other outstanding safeguards issues,' Grossi wrote. IAEA Director-General Rafael Mariano Grossi later tweeted out a statement detailing the arrangement. Iranian media first reported the deal without citing a source. Iran had since refused the International Atomic Energy Agency access to replace cameras damaged in the incident, part of an ongoing hard-line tact taken by Tehran at negotiations underway in Vienna over its tattered 2015 nuclear deal. The agreement will see cameras put back at Karaj, which came under what Iran describes as a sabotage attack in June. Meanwhile, The United Nations' nuclear watchdog and Iran reached a deal on Wednesday to reinstall cameras damaged at an Iranian site that manufactures centrifuge parts, though inspectors remain limited on what footage they can access. The Iranian flag waves in front of the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) headquarters in Vienna (file photo). The inflammatory front page comes as Israel and the US advanced preparations for a military option if negotiations in Vienna to return the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action (JCPOA) fail The final sentence of the article said simply: 'Keep your hands off!'
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The full quote used by the paper reads: 'Sometimes the leaders of the Zionist regime even threaten us they are threatening to strike militarily, but I think they know it, and if they do not know it, they must know that if they make a mistake, the Islamic Republic will destroy Tel Aviv and Haifa.' The threatening article ended with a 2013 quote from Iranian Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei, who said Iran would 'destroy Tel Aviv and Haifa' if Israel 'makes a mistake' and conducts a military strike against Iran. It added that the paper 'doesn't need to remind the illegitimate regime of Israel of Iran's defense capabilities.' 'An intensification of the Israeli military threats against Iran seems to suggest that the Zionist regime has forgotten that Iran is more than capable of hitting them from anywhere,' the paper wrote in the article's opening paragraph. The picture was part of a front-page article with the headline: 'Just one wrong move!' Iranian newspaper the Tehran Times has revealed a list of Israeli targets the country would strike if Israel makes 'just one wrong move'.Ī map published on the English language newspaper's front page on Wednesday showed pins representing rocket strike locations for dozens of potential targets in Israel, as well as some in Lebanese territory and Palestinian cities in the West Bank.