The IAEA Board of Governors adopted resolution GOV/2026/40 on 10 June by 21 votes to three, with 10 members abstaining. The resolution advances the E3 and US draft tabled on 8 June and demands that Iran disclose its enriched-uranium stockpile and grant inspectors access to four enrichment facilities, denied for roughly a year. It follows the Board's 4 June finding that it could no longer account for 440.9 kilograms of highly enriched uranium .
Russia, China and Niger cast the three votes against, following through on the blocking position the two permanent members coordinated with Rafael Grossi in Geneva on 5 June . The ten abstentions matter as much as the three noes: a censure that passes without a broad majority signals to the Board that any move to escalate the file to the Security Council would splinter. Iran called the resolution a dangerous attempt at whitewashing aggression and warned the European states and the United States bear responsibility for consequences.
The vote landed the day before CENTCOM's second strikes, and against them. The institutional track is moving on the paperwork of non-compliance while the military track moves on the targets, and the two are now running on the same calendar without coordination. A demand for stockpile disclosure issued the day before air strikes on the capital is unlikely to be answered by a state that has just rejected the resolution outright.
