IAEA ready to help define 'concrete steps' to implement U.S.-Iran deal
Now it's for us to sit down with our American colleagues, our Iranian colleagues, and start formulating the concrete steps that will have to be taken, says IAEA chief Rafael Grossi

The International Atomic Energy Agency said on Thursday (June 18, 2026) that it was ready to begin defining the "concrete steps" needed to implement a U.S.-Iran deal to end the West Asia war.
US President Donald Trump and Iranian President Masoud Pezeshkian signed a deal on Wednesday (June 17) meant to end the West Asia war, with Tehran agreeing to dilute its enriched uranium in return for large-scale economic relief."Now it's for us to sit down with our American colleagues, our Iranian colleagues, and start formulating the concrete steps that will have to be taken," IAEA chief Rafael Grossi told reporters in Geneva.The deal aims to draw a line under the war launched by the United States and Israel February 28, prompting Iran to counter-attack with missile and drone salvos across the region -- and effectively shutting down the Strait of Hormuz, a crucial waterway for the world economy.
Washington responded by blocking shipping to and from Iranian ports.Under the terms of the deal released by US officials, Iran will dilute its enriched uranium stocks, possibly by "down-blending on site under the supervision of the IAEA", the UN's nuclear watchdog."This is a very complex operation and it's not a secret so we will have to be very, very detailed," Grossi said, adding that the outcome would depend "on the political will of both sides"."
Anything can work when two sides decide that they want something to be done," he said, adding that they were looking to his organisation to tell "them what is needed".- 'Impartial' -The IAEA estimates that Iran had 440 kilogrammes of uranium enriched to 60 percent -- close to the level needed for a bomb -- as Israel and the United States launched their first attacks in June last year.Iran suspended cooperation with the IAEA then and inspectors have not seen the material since.
The UN nuclear watchdog's governing board last week approved a Western resolution demanding that Iran immediately provide information and access to its uranium stockpile and production facilities.Tehran slammed that resolution as "counter-productive" at a time when talks were going on, and charged it was "politically-motivated" -- something Grossi vehemently denied."The work of the IAEA is an impartial, technical work," he said."
The fact that in this memorandum of understanding that has been signed, the indispensable role of the IAEA is recognised... it says it all in terms of our credibility and the indispensable role we have to play."The agreement is only a temporary arrangement meant to give time for starting detailed negotiations on the far more complex issue of long-term control over Iran's nuclear power ambitions, which Washington has long suspected of harbouring a secret bomb-making programme."
I think it's good that the memorandum is there," Grossi said."Now the technical work starts."ag/nl/rjm/giv Published - June 18, 2026 10:01 pm IST Read Comments Copy link Email Facebook Twitter Telegram LinkedIn WhatsApp Reddit READ LATER SEE ALL Remove Related Topics nuclear policy / Iran / Israel-US strikes on Iran
Đọc thêm từ Thế giới
被害者の名前が書かれた文書を被告に手渡す 広島県警が職員を処分
電車内で10代の女性2人の体を触ったとして、広島県迷惑防止条例違反の罪で起訴された県警科学捜査研究所職員の男(59)に対し、県警の職員が被害者の名前を記した文書を誤って渡していたことがわかった。県警は情報の取り扱いが不適切だったとして、内規に基づいて処分した。 捜査関係者などによると、昨年8月に男が起訴された後、県警職員が男の休職手続きのために留置施設で面会した際、起訴内容を写した文書を男に手渡した。文書には、本来明かすべきではない被害者2人の名前が記されていたという。 外部からの指摘を受け、県警は文書を回収し、被害者側に謝罪の意向を伝えた。名前が男に伝

Court hears Alberta separatist group’s plea for stay of referendum petition ruling
A judge ruled last month that the Stay Free Alberta petition shouldn't have been issued and that Premier Danielle Smith's government neglected its duty to consult First Nations.

The 14-point US-Iran pact White House sent to Congress
WASHINGTON — The White House on Thursday sent Congress the text of an interim U.S.-Iran agreement to halt the war and open the Strait of Hormuz. The document, a copy of which was seen by Reuters, outlines in 14 points a high-level understanding that defers many of the most diffic
Slovak government wins confidence vote after debt breach
June 18 - Slovakia's parliament backed the government on Thursday in a confidence vote triggered by a breach of the country's legal debt limits, but the move sharpened debate over fiscal policy.