Iran is pulling cameras out of nuclear power plants, nuclear agreement is dropping.

Iran has begun to remove monitoring cameras in its nuclear power plants, which were previously set by the International Atomic Agency. Such a step has been viewed with fear by negotiators involved in reaching a new nuclear agreement with Iran, because the Islamic country will have a lack of surveillance to see [...]
Such a step has been seen with fear by negotiators involved in reaching a new nuclear agreement with Iran, because the Islamic country will have a lack of surveillance to see how it uses enriched uranium and as far as it will enrich it.
Rafael Gross, director general of the International Atomic Energy Agency, depending on the UN, held a press conference where he said Iran has begun to remove 27 surveillance cameras from nuclear centales in the country. Grossi warned that the move could be an almost fatal blow to prospects for the revival of the 2015 nuclear agreement with Iran.
Some of the most important international powers were involved in negotiations with Iran, Vienna, and the parties were hoping for an important and productive agreement with the Islamic Republic. This move taken by Iran could bring consequences to negotiations in Vienna.
The measures, according to experts, may also have come as retaliation to a recent resolution by Western allies who say Iran has failed to explain the finding of uranium tracks in previously undeclared countries. China and Russia, meanwhile, voted against this resolution, broadcasts the Oranews.
Iran and world powers agreed in 2015 on a nuclear deal. In 2018, President Trump unilaterally withdrew the US from the deal. Talks continue in Vienna, while experts say Iran has enriched enough uranium to 60 per cent to produce a nuclear weapon. Iran insists its programme is for peaceful purposes, but Israel has threatened in the past that it would conduct a preventative attack on Iran. The situation is dangerous and complicated in the Middle East.
Iran and world powers agreed in 2015 on a nuclear deal. In 2018, President Trump unilaterally withdrew the US from the deal. Talks continue in Vienna, while experts say Iran has enriched enough uranium to 60 per cent to produce a nuclear weapon. Iran insists its programme is for peaceful purposes, but Israel has threatened in the past that it would conduct a preventative attack on Iran. The situation is dangerous and complicated in the Middle East.












