Iran’s president announced on Wednesday that the regime is ending all cooperation with the UN International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) following U.S. airstrikes on its nuclear facilities last month.
Iran has limited IAEA inspections of its facilities in the past during negotiations over its nuclear program.
Iran’s decision drew immediate condemnation from Israeli Foreign Minister Gideon Saar. In mid-June, Israel started a more than week-long airstrike campaign on Iran’s nuclear program and its military leaders and nuclear scientists before Iran responded by firing barrages of missiles at Israel.
A peace agreement was announced by President Donald Trump after U.S. airstrikes on three Iranian facilities.
Saar urged European nations that were part of Iran’s 2015 nuclear deal to implement its so-called snapback clause. That would reimpose all U.N. sanctions on it originally lifted by Tehran’s nuclear deal with world powers if one of its Western parties declares the Iranian regime out of compliance.
Israeli and U.S. officials have long said that Iran is using its nuclear program to attempt to create nuclear weapons. Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said in June that his country’s airstrikes were meant to prevent the regime from quickly obtaining such a device.
After the airstrikes, Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth, top U.S. intelligence officials, and Trump said that Iran’s nuclear enrichment capabilities were severely degraded.
“Iran has the capacities there; industrial and technological capacities. So if they so wish, they will be able to start doing this again,” he stressed.
Iran’s move to suspend cooperation with the IAEA comes as Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi signaled in a recent CBS News interview that Tehran still would be willing to continue negotiations with the United States.
However, he added, “The doors of diplomacy will never slam shut.”







