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Iran Conflict 2026
15MAY

Putin blames Washington for killing uranium deal

4 min read
13:51UTC

Putin told a Moscow press conference that Russia's uranium-custody offer for Iran still stands and that Washington, not Tehran, killed the arrangement by demanding US-territory storage.

ConflictDeveloping
Key takeaway

Putin said Washington killed the Russian uranium custody deal and the verification void leaves the claim untestable.

Vladimir Putin told a press conference in Moscow on 9-10 May 2026 that Russia's offer to take custody of Iran's enriched uranium "still stands" 1. Putin's procedural claim is the new material in his 9-10 May remarks. Putin said "initially everyone agreed" the uranium would go to Russia, and that "the United States hardened its position and demanded that the uranium be transported exclusively to US territory", at which point Iran hardened its own position. Tehran has not corroborated. Washington has not commented. The line was carried by Moscow Times, Eastern Herald, Dawn.com and Pravda USA, all second-tier outlets with Putin as the sole named source.

The IAEA (International Atomic Energy Agency, the UN nuclear-inspections body) has had no on-site access in Iran since the 11 April Majlis 221-0 cooperation suspension, which means no third party can audit Putin's account in real time. GOV/2026/8, dated 27 February 2026, remains the most recent Board of Governors report Vienna has issued. Rafael Grossi, the IAEA Director-General, told the AP on 29 April that 18 containers of approximately 200 kg of 60%-enriched uranium had entered the Isfahan Uranium Conversion Facility tunnel on 9 June 2025, four days before Israel's first strikes . That tunnel record is the last inspector-grade observation anyone has on the stockpile a Russian custody arrangement would notionally cover.

Putin is invoking a real precedent. Russia transported Iranian-enriched uranium under JCPOA Annex I procedures in 2015, with US, Russian and IAEA sign-off. The collapse he describes here merges three negotiation rounds into one procedural sequence: 2015, the 2024 "Anchorage" talks, and the 2026 MOU window. Even if true in part, the conflation simplifies a more textured record, and the verification void means no third party can audit it. Yuan-only PGSA tolls at up to $2m per ship sit beside the uranium claim as another off-dollar instrument running outside Western reach, which is the broader pattern Moscow is trading on.

For non-aligned audiences, the framing reframes the standard Western position that "Iran will not surrender its uranium". Washington's silence is itself a data point, and Russia gains a costless diplomatic surface ahead of any Trump-Xi or Trump-Putin window. A custody arrangement for material no inspector has counted in 14 months remains a paper offer, regardless of which side Putin places the blame on.

Deep Analysis

In plain English

Iran has about 200 kilograms of uranium enriched to 60% purity, the stuff that could, with further enrichment, be used to make a nuclear weapon. One potential solution to the crisis has been for Iran to hand this uranium over to Russia for safekeeping, rather than the US. Putin claimed at a press conference that originally everyone, including the US, agreed Russia would hold the uranium, but then Washington changed its mind and demanded the uranium go to the US instead, which made Iran dig in. Putin alone has gone on record with this sequence; Tehran has not corroborated and Washington has not commented. Neither Iran nor the US has confirmed his account. And the UN nuclear watchdog (the IAEA) has been blocked from entering Iran's nuclear sites since April, so no independent body can verify what's actually in those sites or what was agreed. The claim matters primarily because it gives non-Western countries a ready-made narrative that blames the US for blocking a deal.

Deep Analysis
Root Causes

Putin's claim operates at the intersection of three structural conditions, each of which amplifies the narrative impact independent of its factual accuracy.

First, the IAEA has been locked out of Iranian nuclear facilities since the Majlis 221-0 vote of 11 April 2026. No independent body can verify Putin's account, Iran's silence, or Washington's non-comment. The verification void that makes the uranium custody dispute central to the MOU also makes Putin's counter-narrative about that dispute structurally unverifiable.

Second, Putin's claim appeared in second-tier outlets (Moscow Times, Eastern Herald) rather than the Kremlin's primary English-language channels. This distribution pattern, carrying significant claims through outlets with lower editorial credibility, is consistent with a trial balloon rather than a formal policy statement.

It allows Moscow to introduce the narrative into global information flow, test the response from non-aligned audiences (BRICS+ members, Global South media), and deny it as misquoted or distorted if it produces diplomatic blowback.

Third, Rosatom's February-April 2026 offer to take custody of Iranian uranium, tabled through Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov and Rosatom CEO Alexei Likhachev in three different technical formats (transfer and dilute, equivalent natural uranium, financial payment), was never formally accepted by either Iran or the US. Putin is retroactively characterising an unaccepted offer as a trilateral consensus that Washington destroyed, a reframing that requires no new facts.

What could happen next?
  • Consequence

    Putin's narrative, carried without Chinese corroboration, creates a US-blaming framework for the uranium custody failure that will circulate in BRICS+ diplomatic circuits independent of its accuracy, making future US demands for multilateral buy-in on Iran uranium disposal harder to achieve.

    Medium term · 0.74
  • Risk

    The distribution through second-tier outlets rather than Kremlin primary channels means the claim can be escalated or denied depending on Western and Iranian reactions, giving Moscow maximum narrative flexibility without a formal commitment to the account.

    Immediate · 0.78
  • Precedent

    If the 'US demanded US-only custody' account goes unchallenged by Washington, it may harden as the received narrative in non-aligned forums, setting a precedent that the US cannot achieve multilateral uranium-custody arrangements without formally rebutting the account in the UN Security Council or IAEA Board.

    Long term · 0.66
First Reported In

Update #94 · Tehran writes, Trump tweets, Brent breaks

Eastern Herald· 11 May 2026
Read original
Causes and effects
This Event
Putin blames Washington for killing uranium deal
A Russian-state press event has become the public default source on a US negotiation track that Washington has not contested on the record.
Different Perspectives
India (BRICS chair / S. Jaishankar)
India (BRICS chair / S. Jaishankar)
India's BRICS chair draft communique frames the Iran conflict as a matter of 'safe, unimpeded maritime flows', a formula explicitly neutral on Iran's 'no obstacles' claim and short of endorsing IRGC maritime doctrine. Delhi has maintained separate tracks: a demarche on Iranian tanker firings at Indian-crewed vessels, silence on OFAC designations naming Indian firms.
International Energy Agency
International Energy Agency
The IEA's May 2026 Oil Market Report quantified the closure at 14.4 million barrels per day shut in, more than one billion barrels of cumulative supply loss, and a 246-million-barrel inventory draw in eight weeks, five times the monthly rate of the 2022 SPR release. The IEA projects a deficit through Q4 2026 even if Hormuz reopens in June.
Pakistan (mediating channel)
Pakistan (mediating channel)
Pakistan's intermediary channel between Washington and Tehran remains active despite Trump's 'totally unacceptable' rebuff of Iran's 10-point MOU reply on 11 May. Islamabad carries the only direct US-Iran track and the only channel with both civilian and military buy-in on the Iranian side, but has not convened a second Islamabad round.
Mojtaba Khamenei / IRIB
Mojtaba Khamenei / IRIB
Iran's state broadcaster reported on 14 May that the Supreme Leader has issued 'new and decisive directives' for military operations, the first such signal since the war began. Mojtaba has not appeared publicly since 28 February; the directives are paper instruments, not verbal statements.
Chinese Ministry of Foreign Affairs
Chinese Ministry of Foreign Affairs
Beijing's official summit readout mentioned 'the Middle East situation' alongside the Ukraine crisis and the Korean Peninsula, without naming Iran or specifying any Iranian commitment. Chinese state media has not published the three red lines Trump described.
White House / Trump administration
White House / Trump administration
Trump told Fox News from Beijing that Xi had committed to three Iran red lines: no nuclear weapon, an open Hormuz, no military equipment supplied to Tehran. He described the summit as 'a big statement'. The White House issued its own readout confirming those commitments; the Chinese Ministry of Foreign Affairs readout did not.