Australia/Israel Review
Biden must make Iran come clean
Apr 27, 2021 | Anthony Ruggiero, Richard Goldberg
President Joe Biden’s Iran policy centres on the notion of “compliance for compliance” — if Iran returns to compliance with the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action (JCPOA), the United States will follow suit and lift its sanctions on Iran. But with recent revelations that Teheran has been cheating on the deal from day one, Biden must compel Iran to fully account for all undeclared nuclear activities before easing sanctions. Otherwise, he will irreparably harm the international safeguards regime.
International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) Director General Rafael Grossi announced on March 1 that the agency visited three sites in Iran last year and discovered undeclared nuclear material at two of them. The Institute for Science and International Security stated that one of the sites was the location of a pilot uranium conversion facility and the other was used to test components for Iran’s nuclear weapons program.
Grossi also reported that for the last 18 months, “Iran has not provided the necessary, full and technically credible explanation” for why the IAEA found nuclear material at an additional site.
The Biden Administration faces an imminent threat to the IAEA’s safeguards regime. Iran committed to the nonproliferation principles enshrined in the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT) and the IAEA safeguards regime. A core element of these commitments is that non-nuclear weapon states, like Iran, commit to not develop nuclear weapons and the IAEA implements a system of safeguards that verify Iran is not using declared facilities to produce nuclear weapons.
When a country conducts nuclear activities at undeclared sites outside the safeguards system, it suggests that the country is attempting to produce materiel or components necessary for a nuclear weapon.
Teheran’s repeated attempts to hide its activities are a troublesome sign that we do not yet know the full extent of those activities. If the Biden Administration sweeps this issue away, as the Obama Administration did to preserve the JCPOA, it will have devastating impacts on the IAEA safeguards regime.
A reporter recently asked State Department spokesperson Ned Price a simple question: Does Iran need to declare to the IAEA all its currently undeclared nuclear sites, materials and activities for the regime to be considered “back in compliance” with the JCPOA? Price’s response was anything but simple: “…we know that Iran continues to take steps in excess of the JCPOA… So it’s precisely why we put this offer on the table, to meet with the Iranians in the context of the P5+1, to try and get back to that point of joint full compliance with the JCPOA… And so the IAEA will be the judge as to whether Iran is or is not in full compliance.”
Price’s convoluted answer raises several concerns and could signal Biden’s willingness to ignore Iran’s potential breach of the NPT.
Iran’s concealment of a secret nuclear archive — which Teheran likely kept to allow for a quick restart of its nuclear weapons program — and its undeclared nuclear activities occurred before the Iran-US JCPOA standoff.
Thus, Price’s statement wrongly frames a US return to the JCPOA as a possible solution.
The Biden Administration must come to terms with this basic truth: The IAEA didn’t know that Iran was concealing a nuclear archive, nuclear sites and nuclear materials until Israel’s Mossad discovered the archive.
The JCPOA’s verification regime failed, much as it did in the early 2000s when foreign sources tipped off the agency to Iran’s secret nuclear facilities. An Iran-IAEA deal brokered in March could lead to Iran destroying three months of monitoring data that could further weaken IAEA monitoring.
The United States cannot have confidence in the IAEA’s ability to fully verify Iran’s activities until and unless the regime fully accounts for its undeclared work.
In 2015, the Obama Administration made a fatal error of allowing the JCPOA to proceed without forcing such a full accounting. The Biden Administration now has an opportunity to correct course.
If the Biden Administration returns to the JCPOA without resolving the problem of Iran’s undeclared activities, it would send a dangerous message and green light to Teheran to advance a clandestine nuclear weapons program. North Korea will be taking notes given its own unresolved nuclear activities, and countries eyeing expanded nuclear programs, like Saudi Arabia, may learn the same lesson. A nuclear arms race in the Middle East could follow.
President Biden should deliver a clear message: There will be no sanctions relief for Iran without a full accounting. There should be no going back to a nuclear deal based on nuclear deception.
Richard Goldberg is a senior advisor at the Foundation for Defense of Democracies (FDD) and previously served as Director for Countering Iranian Weapons of Mass Destruction for the US National Security Council. Anthony Ruggiero is a senior fellow at FDD and previously served in the US Government for more than 19 years. © FDD (fdd.org), reprinted by permission, all rights reserved.
Tags: IAEA, Iran, JCPOA, United States