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30JUN

US tables uranium draft at IAEA Board

2 min read
17:31UTC

Washington submitted a draft resolution to the IAEA Board of Governors as its 8-12 June session opened, demanding Iranian transparency on nuclear sites and uranium stockpiles.

TechnologyDeveloping
Key takeaway

The US draft demands access Iran has denied for 97 days, a gap no resolution can backfill.

The United States submitted a draft resolution to the IAEA (International Atomic Energy Agency) Board of Governors as its 8-12 June session opened, demanding Iranian transparency on nuclear sites and uranium stockpiles 1. IAEA officials cited "proliferation concerns" 2.

Whether the draft rises to a formal censure, and which states co-sponsor it, remains unverified; the IAEA's own Board pages were inaccessible at the time of writing 3. The text lands four days after the Board found a loss of continuity of knowledge on Iran's 440.9 kg of HEU (highly enriched uranium), after 97 days without inspector access . Inspectors cannot reconstruct days they were locked out of, yet the resolution demands the access that gap denied them.

The custody question sits underneath. Vladimir Putin reaffirmed Russia's offer to hold Iran's uranium at the SPIEF (St Petersburg International Economic Forum) on 6 June . The verification gap renders that offer unworkable: nobody can confirm a stockpile they cannot inspect, and a Board resolution demanding access may harden Tehran's refusal rather than soften it.

Deep Analysis

In plain English

The IAEA (International Atomic Energy Agency) is the United Nations body that checks whether countries are keeping nuclear material secure and not secretly building weapons. Its governing board met in Vienna on 8 June. The United States put a formal proposal on the table demanding Iran allow inspectors back in to confirm where its stockpile of enriched uranium is. Iran has had no IAEA inspectors on site for 97 days. The agency's director reported that 440.9 kg of highly enriched uranium, enough in theory to build several weapons if processed further, can no longer be accounted for with confidence. Russia has offered to take custody of that stockpile, but that offer requires confirming how much and where it is, which is exactly what the verification gap prevents.

Deep Analysis
Root Causes

The IAEA's safeguards regime requires continuous inspector presence to maintain chain of custody over fissile material. Iran expelled inspectors following the Majlis 221-0 vote on 11 April 2026, a vote taken in direct response to Israeli-US strikes.

Once the custody chain breaks it cannot be reconstituted retroactively. The US draft resolution cannot close the evidentiary gap it cites; it creates only a political record that the gap exists.

What could happen next?
  • Precedent

    A censure without Russian or Chinese co-sponsorship sets no binding obligation on Iran and cannot trigger the JCPOA snapback mechanism, which expired in October 2025 anyway, leaving the Board resolution as a political document only.

  • Risk

    Putin's HEU custody offer (ID:3937) requires IAEA verification of the stockpile's location and quantity as a prerequisite; the Board session that flags verification failure also renders the custodian offer undeliverable, removing Russia's diplomatic off-ramp.

First Reported In

Update #121 · Trump said don't strike; Israel struck Iran

Arab News· 8 Jun 2026
Read original
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