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Iran Conflict 2026
24APR

Baqaei: uranium 'as sacred as Iranian soil'

2 min read
11:11UTC

Iran's Foreign Ministry spokesperson publicly rejected President Trump's claim that Iran had agreed to a uranium handover, using language that admits no diplomatic room on the removal clause anchoring the US 15-point plan.

ConflictDeveloping
Key takeaway

Iran's Foreign Ministry has publicly rejected the HEU transfer on which the US 15-point plan depends.

Iran's Foreign Ministry spokesperson Esmail Baghaei declared on 19 April that the country's enriched uranium is "as sacred as Iranian soil" and that transfer to the United States "was never presented as an option under consideration" 1. His full line, carried by the Farsi daily Entekhab: "To the same extent that Iranian soil is sacred, enriched uranium is likewise sacred."

The statement is a direct public rejection of President Donald Trump's 17 April claim that Iran had agreed to a uranium handover . The Foreign Ministry, the civilian arm of Iran's government, is the institutional voice most sensitive to hardliner audiences at home and to IRGC-adjacent media. Its red line must hold publicly. Baqaei drew that line in terms Tehran's domestic audience can hear without objection and that foreign counterparts cannot walk back in private.

Iran's 440.9 kg stockpile at 60 per cent purity has gone unverified by the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) since the 11 April Majlis vote to suspend cooperation 2. Baqaei chose a religious register as well as a diplomatic one. It treats the stockpile as national patrimony, which in Iran's political culture places it beyond the reach of transfer on a diplomatic schedule. The US 15-point plan anchors on HEU (highly enriched uranium) removal; Baqaei's statement removes the anchor.

Deep Analysis

In plain English

Iran has spent decades building up stocks of enriched uranium ; a form of processed nuclear fuel that, at high enough concentrations, can also be used to make a nuclear weapon. Iran's stockpile is not yet at weapons-grade, but it is at 60% purity, which is much higher than any civilian power plant needs. President Trump claimed Iran had agreed to hand this stockpile over to the United States. Iran's Foreign Ministry spokesperson Esmail Baghaei rejected this on 19 April, saying the uranium is 'as sacred as Iranian soil' ; meaning no Iranian official could agree to give it away, any more than they could agree to give away a piece of the country. This matters because any nuclear deal that does not address the existing stockpile cannot actually reduce Iran's ability to build a nuclear weapon quickly if it chose to.

Deep Analysis
Root Causes

Iran's 440.9 kg stockpile of 60%-enriched uranium represents a political asset as much as a military one: it is the primary leverage Tehran holds in negotiations, and any agreement to transfer it requires Supreme Leader Mojtaba Khamenei's explicit sign-off. Baqaei cannot negotiate what Khamenei has not authorised.

The theological framing ; 'as sacred as Iranian soil' ; places uranium transfer in the category of territorial concession, which under Iranian constitutional law requires parliamentary approval and a national referendum. Baqaei's language is not rhetorical excess; it is a public legal constraint that makes uranium transfer constitutionally more difficult to authorise than a standard diplomatic concession.

What could happen next?
  • Consequence

    Baqaei's theological framing creates a domestic political constraint that binds any future Iranian negotiator ; uranium transfer now requires overturning a publicly stated sacred-land equivalence, not just a policy reversal.

  • Risk

    Trump's fourth claim of Iranian agreement followed by an Iranian denial within hours (ID:2582) creates a credibility gap that makes any genuine breakthrough announcement harder for markets and allies to assess at face value.

First Reported In

Update #73 · Russia yes, Iran no: Treasury signs only one waiver

Entekhab· 19 Apr 2026
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Causes and effects
Different Perspectives
Pakistan
Pakistan
Tahir Andrabi said Pakistan 'remained positive and optimistic' about a settlement; Foreign Minister Ishaq Dar's office is the confirmed MOU channel and conduit for Iran's pending reply. Pakistan has not previewed any Iranian counter-text; the channel's value is its discretion.
UAE
UAE
The UAE foreign ministry has not commented on the IRGC's 5 May maritime-control-zone map. Fujairah and Khor Fakkan absorbing 1.62 million bpd and 50,000 container vessels per week are the de facto response, demonstrating continued operation without legal confrontation over the IRGC's coastline claim.
China
China
The NFRA quietly ordered the four largest state banks to halt new yuan loans to Hengli before 1 May while MOFCOM publicly told the same firms to defy OFAC; Beijing has not confirmed the alleged Iranian attack on a Chinese vessel. The dual signal is audience-differentiated: balance-sheet risk managers see the NFRA order, domestic and Iranian audiences see MOFCOM defiance.
Hezbollah
Hezbollah
Hezbollah's response to the Dahiyeh killings was restrained: low-to-medium rocket and drone attacks in southern Lebanon causing no casualties. With the Radwan Force losing its third command-level figure since March 2026, succession is the immediate operational question; restraint preserves the Lebanon ceasefire extension that is one of the MOU's seven heads.
Israel
Israel
The IDF said Balout had been 'directing dozens of attacks against Israeli troops in southern Lebanon during the war' and confirmed 220+ Hezbollah operatives killed since the 16 April ceasefire. Defence Minister Katz said Hezbollah was applying pressure out of concern Israel would crush it; Israeli operational tempo in Lebanon is independent of US diplomatic timelines.
United States
United States
CENTCOM said US destroyers responded in self-defence and reported no hull damage; the White House signed nothing on 7 May, leaving the MOU routed via Pakistan as the administration's only active diplomatic instrument. Treasury's OFAC SB0483 alert prohibits PGSA toll payments, but yuan-denominated settlements through Chinese banks carry no automatic dollar-clearing tripwire, requiring slower individual vessel designations.