Iran's growing uranium stockpile nears atomic bomb threshold
According to a secret report from the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) obtained by the Associated Press, Iran continues to increase its stockpile of enriched uranium. It is approaching the level necessary for producing an atomic bomb.
28 May 2024 07:06
Iran's enrichment of uranium is a consistent policy of Tehran aimed at exerting continuous pressure on the international community. Iran demands the lifting of economic sanctions imposed due to its nuclear program, while the West wants Iran to abandon attempts to construct nuclear weapons.
The report states that Iran's total stock of enriched uranium amounts to 6,200 kilograms. However, the most concerning fact is that the state of uranium is enriched to 60%. As of 11 May, Iran possessed 142 kilograms, more than 20 kilograms more than in February this year.
With uranium enriched to 60%, Iran is just one step away from reaching the 90% level necessary for constructing atomic weapons.
Iran’s enrichment of uranium for "peaceful purposes"
Iran maintains that its nuclear program serves only peaceful purposes. However, IAEA chief Rafael Mariano Grossi warns that Tehran has sufficient enriched uranium to produce several nuclear bombs. He also admitted that the UN agency cannot guarantee that none of Iran's centrifuges have been removed for secret uranium enrichment.
Tensions between Iran and the IAEA have been escalating since 2018. That was when then-US President Donald Trump withdrew from the nuclear deal Tehran had struck with world powers unilaterally. As a result, Iran abandoned all restrictions imposed on its program and swiftly began uncontrolled uranium enrichment.
The IAEA report was created in the context of heightened tensions in the Middle East, mainly due to the ongoing Israel-Hamas war. Last month, Israel and Iran conducted direct attacks on each other's territories for the first time.