Monday, July 1, 2019

Iran Has Confirmed That It Has Surpassed The 300 Kg Limit Set Under The Nuclear Deal



Daily Mail: Iran's enriched uranium stockpile 'passes 300 kg limit' set under nuclear deal

* An unofficial source claimed UN tests found Iran had breached uranium limit
* Iran vowed to expand its uranium stockpiles if there is no new nuclear deal
* Increased Uranium levels could enable Iran to manufacture an atomic bomb

Iran's enriched uranium stockpile has passed the 300kg limit prescribed by the 2015 nuclear deal with world powers, according to media reports.

The semi-official Fars agency attributed its Monday report to an unnamed source, who said UN inspectors had recently weighed Iran's stockpile of low-enriched uranium.

Iran has vowed to begin enriching its stockpile of uranium to higher levels later this month if world powers fail to negotiate new terms for the nuclear accord following the US decision to withdraw from the agreement and restore crippling sanctions.

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More News On Iran Confirming That It Has Surpassed The 300 Kg Limit Set Under The Nuclear Deal

Iran says it has breached stockpile limit under nuclear deal -- AP
Iran amasses more enriched uranium than allowed by nuclear deal -- Reuters
Iran nuclear deal: Enriched uranium limit 'breached' -- BBC
Iran amasses more enriched uranium than allowed by nuclear deal -- Reuters
Iran breaks through enriched uranium limit set in nuclear deal – state media -- Times of Israel
Iran violates nuclear deal, exceeds 300 kg limit on enriched uranium -- Jerusalem Post
Iran uranium stockpile breaches 2015 nuclear deal, state media report -- NBC
Iran surpasses uranium stockpile limit set by nuclear deal, state media says -- FOX News
Iran passes 300 kg limit on low-enriched uranium -- DW
Iran breaks nuclear deal and puts pressure on EU over sanctions -- The Guardian
Iran just breached a limit on its nuclear fuel stockpile which it was meant to observe for another 11 years under Obama-era nuclear deal -- Business Insider
With uranium violation, the ‘who attacks Iran first’ talk gets louder - analysis -- Jerusalem Post

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