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Iran Conflict 2026
3JUN

Iran's red line: dilute uranium at home

3 min read
09:04UTC

Araghchi told Xinhua on 13 June that Iran's 440.9 kg highly enriched uranium will be diluted inside the country, not shipped out as Washington demands.

ConflictDeveloping
Key takeaway

Iran will dilute its uranium at home, not ship it out, keeping a future breakout option alive.

Iran's Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi told China's state agency Xinhua on 13 June that "the only acceptable way of dealing with its highly enriched uranium will be diluting it within Iranian territory". 1 That collides head-on with the US position, which wants the 440.9 kg stockpile of highly enriched uranium (HEU), the material closest to weapons grade, shipped out of Iran before any sanctions relief.

Araghchi is disputing where the uranium ends up, not how much of it there is. Diluting inside Iran leaves Tehran holding both its centrifuge cascades and a domestically stored stockpile, so the material could be re-enriched far faster than if it had left the country. Shipping it out strips that option. Washington has insisted on dismantlement before it unfreezes assets, which means a dilute-at-home arrangement is not a smaller version of the US demand but the opposite answer to the same question.

The technical fault has a verification edge. In-country dilution can only be trusted if inspectors can watch it, and Iran has restricted that access throughout the war. A domestically held stockpile that outside monitors cannot continuously account for is precisely the latent-weapon problem that sank the 2015 nuclear deal's afterlife: the US treats Iranian-held fissile material as a weapon in waiting, Iran treats relocation as a surrender of sovereignty.

Neither side moved off the location over the weekend, even as Araghchi pushed to sign within days. The red line sits beneath the same domestic-authority question the analysts had already flagged, with the IRGC running the war on the ground while the diplomats negotiate . Araghchi can sign a digital MoU within days, but no signature settles where 440.9 kg of physical material gets destroyed.

Deep Analysis

In plain English

Iran has about 441 kilograms of uranium enriched to 60 per cent purity, well above the roughly 3.5 per cent used in civilian power stations. The US wants Iran to send this material out of the country before sanctions are lifted, so it cannot be enriched further to weapons grade. Iran's foreign minister said no: Iran will only dilute, meaning mix it with less-enriched uranium to bring it back down to a safe level, but do that work inside Iran, not abroad. The disagreement matters because diluting inside Iran leaves the machines that made the highly enriched uranium still running and still in place. If talks break down, Iran can ramp those machines back up. Sending the material abroad removes that option completely.

Deep Analysis
Root Causes

Iran's 440.9 kg HEU stockpile represents months of 60%-enriched uranium production from centrifuge cascades that remain physically intact. Diluting inside Iran leaves that infrastructure in place; the breakout time to weapons-grade material at 90% can compress to weeks if the cascades restart.

Araghchi's position also reflects a constitutional constraint: Supreme Leader Mojtaba Khamenei communicates only by handwritten courier with a three-to-five-day lag , so any commitment to ship material out of Iran would require his explicit written authorisation. The Foreign Ministry cannot bind that chain unilaterally.

What could happen next?
  • Risk

    If the dilute-in-Iran versus ship-it-out gap is not bridged in the MoU text, any signed document will face immediate US Senate challenge on verification grounds.

    Short term · Assessed
  • Consequence

    The IAEA Board resolution GOV/2026/40 remains in force while the stockpile location dispute continues; Iran called it a dangerous whitewashing attempt and has not committed to new inspections.

    Medium term · Assessed
  • Precedent

    Araghchi's public red line via Xinhua signals Tehran is using Chinese state media as the international record for its nuclear positions, a channel Russia and China cannot veto at the Security Council.

    Medium term · Suggested
First Reported In

Update #126 · The weekend signing that never reached paper

Xinhua· 13 Jun 2026
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