Iranian President Masoud Pezeshkian last week passed a law that was adopted by the parliament of the country that would put an end to Tehran’s collaboration with the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA).
The legislation was approved within a few days after the US performed Operation Midnight Hammer, in which it met three large nuclear locations in Iran: Natanz, Isfahan and Fordow.
The law stipulates that every future inspection of the nuclear facilities of Iran must be approved by the IAEA by the Supreme National Security Council of the country, According to Reuters. Iran claims that the IAEA chose the side of the US and Israel in the recent conflict. Moreover, Tehran claims that the resolution of the IAEA has paved the way for the strikes of Israel at the beginning of June.
Iran connects the ties with the UN nuclear watchdog IAEA after us and Israeli strikes at the nuclear facilities of Tehran. (Reuters)
Iran’s nuclear capacities are crushed, but the desire of the regime for the bomb can continue to exist
The order of Pezeshkian reportedly had no timetable or details about what would mean the suspension of cooperation, The corresponding press reported.
Nuclear negotiations between the US and Iran have been in break since Israel launched Operation Lion. Iran then hesitated whether it would continue the conversations and claimed that the US was complicit in the actions of Israel. President Donald Trump, however, seemed hopeful that the two countries would return to the table, even after the historical strikes of the US. On June 25, the President said reporters that the US would talk to Iran the next week.

The Iran policy of the UN Atomic Agency receives mixed reviews from experts after nuclear sites of the US Israel
Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi recently told CBS News That “the doors for diplomacy will never close.” However, he also doubts about Trump’s timeline for when conversations would resume.
“I don’t think the negotiations will restart as quickly as that,” Araghchi told CBS News. “To be able to come in again, we must first ensure that America will not go back to focusing on us in a military attack during the negotiations.”

A huge compliment of smoke and fire comes from an oil refinery in Zuid -Teheran after reports that an overnight stay Israeli strike on the site on 15 June 2025 in Tehran, Iran had focused. (Atta Kenare/AFP)
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Although Trump’s critics have argued that the government has exaggerated the extent of the damage to the nuclear locations of Iran, parties involved in the conflict that the status of the facilities apparently corresponded. Spokesperson Esmail Baghaei from Iranian Ministry of Foreign Affairs acknowledged that the sites were “badly damaged” in an interview with Al Jazeera.