Skip to content
Briefings are running a touch slower this week while we rebuild the foundations.See roadmap
Iran Conflict 2026
18APR

Rosatom walks 180 staff out of Bushehr

3 min read
14:57UTC

Rosatom evacuated approximately 180 of its 200-plus staff from the Bushehr nuclear plant by 16 April, leaving roughly 20 for equipment-safety functions.

ConflictDeveloping
Key takeaway

Russia's custody offer needs Russian nuclear technicians in Iran; Russia has just removed them.

Rosatom pulled about 180 of its 200-plus technical staff out of Bushehr by 16 April, leaving a skeleton of around 20 "top managers and those responsible for equipment safety". The Moscow Times and Bloomberg reporting attributes the confirmation directly to Rosatom CEO Alexei Likhachev. This is the first time during the war Russia's operational posture at Iran's only functioning nuclear power plant has become physically visible, and it diverges from everything Moscow has been saying in public.

Dmitry Peskov, speaking for the Kremlin, has continued advancing Rosatom's uranium custody offer as a live proposal: Russia would take receipt of Iran's highly enriched stockpile under three transfer options sketched in March . Custody implementation requires Russian personnel on Iranian soil, handling Iranian material, under Iranian operational oversight. Likhachev, whom Peskov speaks for, is removing that personnel. The offer and the capability to execute the offer are now operating in different countries.

The explanation likely runs through risk rather than policy. Bushehr sits on The Gulf coast inside the theatre of the war, and Rosatom appears to be pricing the asymmetric exposure of Russian nationals inside Iranian nuclear infrastructure during a conflict whose end date no one can fix. Twenty staff remaining for "equipment safety" is the minimum presence required to keep the plant from becoming a radiological hazard; it is not an operational custody workforce. The number tells you what Moscow is protecting against, not what it is positioning for.

The consequence for the nuclear track is clean: the only 2026 monitoring mechanism with movement behind it is now Munir's four-country framework, not the Russian custody offer. Peskov can keep the offer on the table as rhetorical leverage against Washington's 20-year enrichment-pause demand, but the physical absence of Rosatom technicians makes the offer unexecutable in its current form. This is the same pattern the Trump administration has been running: commitments advanced in public without the signed instruments or operational presence that would let them carry. In this case the instrument is staffing, not paper, and the tell is identical.

Deep Analysis

In plain English

Russia built and operates Iran's only nuclear power plant at Bushehr , a large facility generating electricity for Iranian cities. About 200 Russian engineers normally run the plant. As the conflict intensified, Russia quietly pulled most of them out, leaving only around 20 behind to keep it from having a safety problem. This matters for two reasons: first, the plant's safety now rests on a skeleton crew; second, Russia had been publicly offering to take custody of Iran's uranium as part of a peace deal, but the engineers needed to actually do that have now left.

Deep Analysis
Root Causes

Rosatom's evacuation is operationally logical and strategically contradictory. Operationally, Bushehr sits within range of Israeli strikes, and Russian staff have no political or legal obligation to remain in an active war zone.

Strategically, the evacuation removes Russia's primary source of Iranian leverage: Kremlin spokesman Peskov is simultaneously advancing three uranium-custody transfer offers (dilution in Russia, natural uranium swap, cash payment) that require Rosatom's physical presence at Bushehr to implement.

The evacuation also eliminates Russia's ability to operationally deliver on its nuclear-custody offer before the 22 April ceasefire expiry, because any uranium transfer protocol requires the full technical staff roster to manage fuel rod removal safely. Peskov is offering a deal that Rosatom's evacuated staff can no longer execute in the available timeframe.

Escalation

The evacuation is a de-escalatory signal from Moscow , Russia is reducing its personnel footprint in the conflict zone , but it creates a secondary escalation risk from nuclear-safety degradation that is independent of the military campaign.

What could happen next?
  • Risk

    Twenty staff managing a VVER-1000 in care-and-maintenance mode cannot execute a safe emergency response to a primary-coolant loss-of-flow incident; any cooling system disruption becomes a potential radiological event.

    Immediate · Medium
  • Consequence

    Rosatom's evacuation voids its operational capacity to implement the uranium-custody transfer offer Peskov continues to advance diplomatically; the offer is now structurally undeliverable before the ceasefire expiry.

    Short term · High
  • Risk

    If Bushehr's skeleton crew declares an emergency, the IAEA , whose monitoring cooperation Iran suspended on 11 April , has no standing inspectors to assess the situation, creating a verification blackout at the moment of highest nuclear-safety risk.

    Short term · Medium
First Reported In

Update #71 · Netanyahu learned from the media

Moscow Times / Bloomberg· 17 Apr 2026
Read original
Different Perspectives
Lloyd's of London war-risk underwriters
Lloyd's of London war-risk underwriters
Lloyd's kept its Hormuz war-risk designation unchanged at $10-14 million per voyage even as Brent spiked 7%, holding the split from futures that has run since late May. Underwriters require a Security Council resolution or government certification, not a presidential phone call.
Gulf Cooperation Council states
Gulf Cooperation Council states
Gulf states, having written to the IMO rejecting Iran's Hormuz transit authority, watched a fresh missile exchange land on Kuwaiti soil. Riyadh and Abu Dhabi remain caught between US security guarantees and Iranian fire, with no Gulf state co-belligerent except Kuwait.
China
China
Beijing stayed out of the diplomatic rupture, sending no envoy and offering no public position on the suspended talks. China keeps its bilateral energy corridor with Tehran while declining the exposure of a mediating role Trump barred it from anyway.
Kuwait
Kuwait
Kuwait's air defences engaged two Iranian ballistic missiles aimed at US forces late on 31 May, the second interception in days after invoking Article 51. Repeated strikes test whether Kuwait's politics can sustain hosting US forces as a de facto co-belligerent.
Lebanon and Hezbollah
Lebanon and Hezbollah
Lebanon announced a partial ceasefire under which Hezbollah pledged to stop attacking Israel, the concrete output of Trump's call. Beirut heads to Washington on 3 June with Israeli forces still inside the south, testing whether the truce survives contact.
Israel under Netanyahu
Israel under Netanyahu
Netanyahu stood down the planned Beirut operation under Trump's pressure but kept his ground advance running toward the Zaharani river, the deepest incursion in 25 years, and disputed Trump's claim that troops had turned around. Israel signalled the halt is tactical, not a wind-down.