Biden Wants Other 'Options' to Block Iran Nuclear Weapons Capability if Deal Fails

A photo published by the IAEA website of its Director-General, Rafael Grossi last Monday
A photo published by the IAEA website of its Director-General, Rafael Grossi last Monday
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Biden Wants Other 'Options' to Block Iran Nuclear Weapons Capability if Deal Fails

A photo published by the IAEA website of its Director-General, Rafael Grossi last Monday
A photo published by the IAEA website of its Director-General, Rafael Grossi last Monday

US President Joe Biden wants to ensure that the United States has "other available options" to ensure that Iran does not achieve nuclear weapons capability, if efforts to revive the 2015 Iran nuclear deal fail, a White House spokesperson said.

National security spokesman John Kirby said Washington would remain active in pushing for reimplementation of the agreement, but its patience was "not eternal", reported Reuters.

"Even as he has fostered and encouraged and pushed for a diplomatic path, (Biden) has conveyed to the rest of the administration that he wants to make sure that we have other available options to us to potentially achieve that solid outcome of the no nuclear weapons capability for Iran," he said.

On Thursday, France expressed concern over Iran's lack of cooperation with the International Atomic Energy Agency regarding the undeclared nuclear sites.

Meanwhile, Iran dismissed as "baseless" Thursday a report from the UN nuclear watchdog that it was unable to certify the Iranian nuclear program as "exclusively peaceful".

"The recent report... is a rehash for political purposes of baseless issues from the past," Iran Atomic Energy Organization spokesman Behrouz Kamalvandi said in a statement.

"Iran will present its well-founded legal responses" to the findings at the IAEA's next board of governors meeting in Vienna from September 12 to 16, he added.

In its report, the IAEA said it was "not in a position to provide assurance that Iran's nuclear program is exclusively peaceful".

It said IAEA Director General Rafael Grossi was "increasingly concerned that Iran has not engaged with the agency on the outstanding safeguards issues during this reporting period and, therefore, that there has been no progress towards resolving them".

The IAEA has been pressing Iran for answers on the presence of nuclear material at three undeclared sites and the issue led to a resolution that criticized Iran being passed at the June meeting of the IAEA's board of governors.

Tehran, which maintains that its nuclear program is exclusively peaceful, this week again insisted that the IAEA probe would have to be concluded in order to revive the 2015 deal on its nuclear program with world powers.

In another report also issued on Wednesday, the IAEA addressed Iran's decision in June to disconnect 27 cameras allowing the agency's inspectors to monitor its nuclear activities.

The removal of the cameras has had "detrimental implications for the agency's ability to provide assurance of the peaceful nature of Iran's nuclear program," the report said.

Kamalvandi said the issue of the monitoring cameras would be addressed as part of a revived nuclear agreement.

But he stressed that the United States needed to meet its obligations too by lifting the economic sanctions imposed by then president Donald Trump after he unilaterally abandoned the deal in 2018.

"In order to restore the previous verification system, the parties to the agreement must abide by their commitments," Kamalvandi said.

The twin IAEA reports come as Tehran and Washington exchange responses to a "final" draft agreement drawn up by European Union mediators.

EU foreign policy chief Josep Borrell had expressed hope that with minor modifications the draft would prove acceptable to both sides, but on Monday he said that recent exchanges had left him "less confident".

Washington said last week that Tehran's latest proposed changes to the text were "not constructive" and Borrell too voiced disappointment.

"The last answer I got, if the purpose is to close the deal quickly, it is not going to help it," he said.

A renewed deal would see more than one million barrels of Iranian oil back on international markets, bringing new relief to consumers hit by surging prices after Russia's invasion of Ukraine.



Karroubi Slams Nuclear Policy for Driving Iranians ‘to The Abyss’

Former reformist president Khatami visits Karroubi’s home in March – Ensaf News
Former reformist president Khatami visits Karroubi’s home in March – Ensaf News
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Karroubi Slams Nuclear Policy for Driving Iranians ‘to The Abyss’

Former reformist president Khatami visits Karroubi’s home in March – Ensaf News
Former reformist president Khatami visits Karroubi’s home in March – Ensaf News

Prominent Iranian reformist Mehdi Karroubi on Thursday blasted the ruling establishment’s “disastrous” policies, particularly its nuclear program, accusing it of driving the nation “to the edge of the abyss”.

Meanwhile, former president Hassan Rouhani urged a “new strategy” to reduce tensions with the United States, saying Iran’s waning regional influence, domestic unrest and frayed ties with Europe had emboldened Washington and Israel to launch a June attack on Tehran.

Karroubi, freed in May after 14 years under house arrest for co-leading the 2009 Green Movement, told a group of reformists the government had promised to lift the nation to “the summit” through nuclear power but instead “dragged it to the bottom”.

He said the authorities had failed to offer domestic reforms or free political prisoners, urging senior leaders to “return to the people” and lay the ground for structural change “before it is too late”.

His ally Mirhossein Mousavi, still under house arrest with his wife Zahra Rahnavard since 2011, renewed calls for a referendum to draft a new constitution, saying the 12-day June war proved the need to respect all citizens’ right to self-determination.

Rouhani, who served as president from 2013 to 2021, described the June 13–24 conflict with Israel, which he said was backed by Washington and more than 40 countries, as a “turning point”.

He called the opening strike, which he said killed civilians in a residential building, a “war crime”.

Rouhani echoed other officials in recounting that more than 30 senior military and security commanders were killed on the war’s first day.

He said US and Israeli planners had expected the assassinations to paralyze Iran’s forces, but Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei’s swift replacements and morale-boosting visits kept defenses intact.

He said Israel, with US backing, had aimed to end the war within four days by killing the heads of Iran’s three branches of power in a strike on the Supreme National Security Council, but Iranian missile barrages on Tel Aviv and Haifa turned that day into “Israel’s greatest defeat” and derailed US President Donald Trump’s plans to declare victory.

Rouhani said the two foes pressed on “in desperation” after failing to topple the system, attempting to bomb a nuclear site with a US B-2 stealth bomber. He said Iran’s hypersonic missile response thwarted the attack and that the nuclear program was “only a pretext” for broader strategic aims.

The former president linked the war to Gaza, Lebanon, Syria, worsening relations with Europe after the Ukraine conflict, and Iran’s internal rifts since 2022 protests – factors he said convinced Washington and Tel Aviv of Tehran’s weakness.

He accused Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu of seeking to prolong the war to shore up his rule, and Trump of revenge for past diplomatic defeats at the United Nations and in The Hague.

Rouhani warned the “enemy” still sought to dismantle Iran, urging national unity, stronger armed forces and the return of skilled Iranians abroad. He called for easing hostility with the US, improving ties with neighbors and Europe, and keeping the military and intelligence services out of economic and political affairs.

He also pushed for media reform, the creation of strong political parties, and a “people-based” intelligence system. Helping other countries, he said, should not come at the expense of Iranian interests.

Rouhani has criticized the derailment of his diplomacy, especially attempts to revive the 2015 nuclear deal in his final months in office, as well as economic mismanagement and curbs on freedoms. His detractors say he failed to deliver many of his own promises while in power.