US-Iran Deal: Technical Work Set to Start, IAEA Chief

The United Nations
By Daniel Johnson, Geneva

The head of the UN's atomic energy agency on Thursday welcomed the signing of an initial Iran-US memorandum aimed at ending the war, before proposing "to sit down" with both parties to assist with concrete measures such as verification of Iran's nuclear programme, a key sticking point.

"We believe the fact that the indispensable role of the IAEA is recognized is a sound point of departure," said Rafael Mariano Grossi, Director General of the International Atomic Energy Agency ( IAEA ) Director General, in reference to the reported text of the memorandum. "Now it's for us to sit down with our American colleagues, our Iranian colleagues and start formulating the concrete steps that will have to be taken. So, I think it's good that the memorandum is there. Now the technical work starts."

According to media reports, the memorandum of understanding provides for a maximum of 60 days of negotiations to achieve a "final deal" on issues including uranium enrichment by Iran which must also reaffirm that it does not intend to develop a nuclear weapon.

Other requirements listed in the memorandum's text include the reopening the Strait of Hormuz to all shipping and an easing of US and UN Security Council sanctions on the Middle East nation.

The "immediate and permanent termination of military operations on all fronts, including in Lebanon" also features prominently in the first of 14 points of the memorandum.

Speaking at the UN in Geneva, Mr. Grossi refused to speculate about spoilers "because we are about to start and we have to initiate any negotiation on the assumption that we are all in with faith, that we want to be successful."

Responding to a question about a possible agreed reduction in the level of uranium enrichment by Iran, the IAEA chief noted that "many, many possibilities" could be explored. The agency's access to all of Iran's nuclear sites is "not at a level and in all the locations it should be", he stressed, but contact with the authorities is ongoing and "it's now, I'd say, that the technical work can start for real".

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