Rafael Grossi, Director-General of the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA), the UN's nuclear watchdog, said on 10 July that his inspectors have "not observed or confirmed any direct attack" on the Bushehr Nuclear Power Plant, Iran's only operating civilian reactor 1. He spoke in Kaliningrad, hours after meeting Rosatom, Russia's state nuclear agency, which built and fuels the plant. Iran had claimed the day before that a US projectile struck Bushehr's perimeter, a claim US Central Command (CENTCOM) met with silence .
Grossi did not offer that non-corroboration from a Western capital or a Vienna podium. He offered it standing inside Russia's nuclear orbit, days after Moscow sent Dmitry Medvedev to Tehran to call Iran's grip on the strait of Hormuz the equal of a nuclear weapon . A refusal from Iran's own nuclear partner cannot be waved away as a Western line, which is why it deflates the claim rather than merely disputing it.
Grossi called any strike on a nuclear plant unacceptable and urged maximum restraint, holding the principle while declining the specific charge 2. His inspectors have been locked out of Iran's nuclear sites since the Majlis, Iran's parliament, voted 221-0 in April to suspend cooperation with the IAEA. So "not observed or confirmed" describes the agency's own blindness as much as the event. The access gap that left the war's stated aims unverifiable now shields Bushehr from independent adjudication in either direction.
