News World Iran has taken significant steps to roll back N-programme: US

Iran has taken significant steps to roll back N-programme: US

Washington: Iran has taken "significant steps" to roll back its nuclear programme under which it has eliminated 98 per cent of its highly enriched uranium stockpile and disconnected thousands of centrifuges, the US has said.

Nuclear programme Image Source : PTINuclear programme

Washington: Iran has taken "significant steps" to roll back its nuclear programme under which it has eliminated 98 per cent of its highly enriched uranium stockpile and disconnected thousands of centrifuges, the US has said.

"We have verified that Iran has taken significant steps to actually roll back their nuclear programme," White House Press Secretary Josh Earnest said.

"The worst-case, dire predictions of the deal's critics did not at all come to pass. What did come to pass is exactly what this administration indicated our objectives were, which were to curtail Iran's nuclear programme, guarantee access for international inspectors who could verify that Iran's nuclear
program only exist for peaceful purposes," he said in response to a question on reports about Iran test-firing another ballistic missile.

Earnest said that it is clear is that Iran has eliminated 98 per cent of its highly enriched uranium stockpile and disconnected thousands of centrifuges.

On July 14, 2015, the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action announced a comprehensive nuclear agreement between Iran and the P5+1 (the US, the UK, Russia, France, China and Germany) and the EU.

"Iran has essentially rendered harmless its heavy-water plutonium reactor. And Iran has complied with its commitment to give international inspectors widespread access to the country to verify its compliance with the agreement," he said.

Talking about how the deal has proved the critics wrong, Earnest said that there were doubts on how Iran's claims that they had gone along with the agreement will be verified but they were able to verify Iran's compliance with the agreement.

"Our critics often suggested that there would never be a way to verify Iran's claims that they had gone along with the agreement. They were wrong about that, too. The international inspectors at the IAEA (International Atomic Energy Agency) have gotten the access that they have needed to verify Iran's
compliance with the agreement," Earnest said.

"What our critics have also suggested is that the agreement would open the door to hundreds of billions of dollars in cash for the Iranian economy. That has not occurred either. In fact, we actually see some in Iran suggesting that they haven't gotten as much funding out of the deal as they expected," he said.

Latest World News