Iran's Foreign Ministry spokesman Esmail Baghaei ruled out International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) inspection of the country's war-damaged nuclear sites on 23 June 2026, the day after General License X issued. The IAEA is the United Nations body that verifies whether states are building weapons. Tehran had held no meeting with its director general and had no plans for inspectors to enter the facilities struck by US and Israeli forces, Baghaei told reporters 1. That denial contradicts the recital inside the licence Bessent signed the day before, and Vice President JD Vance's 21 June claim that Switzerland had produced an IAEA-return agreement .
IRGC-aligned Tasnim News Agency went further, naming Iran's "nuclear ambiguity" as a deliberate post-war doctrine and arguing inspector access would collapse it 2. Opacity about weapons capability has long been Israel's posture, not Iran's; Tehran adopting it now reframes the bombed enrichment sites as a sovereignty line rather than a verification problem. Mojtaba Khamenei had already branded full IAEA access an "excessive demand" on 18 June , and Baghaei is the spokesman operationalising that line.
The distinction bites because of what the inspectors would count. The Institute for Science and International Security (ISIS), a Washington non-proliferation research group, estimates that roughly 155 to 175 kg of Iran's 440.9 kg of 60 per cent enriched uranium remains unlocated, with the agency shut out since 28 February 3. That material is the strongest card Iran holds after losing much of its enrichment infrastructure. Inviting inspectors in would convert the ambiguity into a known, and smaller, quantity, so Iran banks the oil while the uranium stays in the dark.
