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โIranโs uranium enrichment level will not be limited to 20 per cent. We will increase it to whatever level the country needs โฆ We may increase it to 60 per cent,โ the TV quoted Khamenei as saying, upping the ante in a stand-off with US President Joe Bidenโs administration over the future of the fraying deal.
Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei said on Monday Iran might enrich uranium up to 60 per cent purity if the country needed it and would never yield to US pressure over its nuclear programme, state television reported.
Iranโs 2015 nuclear deal with six powers, which it has been breaching since the United States withdrew in 2018, caps the fissile purity to which Tehran can refine uranium at 3.67 per cent, well under the 20 per cent achieved before the agreement and far below the 90 per cent suitable for a nuclear weapon.
โIranโs uranium enrichment level will not be limited to 20 per cent. We will increase it to whatever level the country needs โฆ We may increase it to 60 per cent,โ the TV quoted Khamenei as saying, upping the ante in a stand-off with US President Joe Bidenโs administration over the future of the fraying deal.
โAmericans and the European parties to the deal have used unjust language against Iran โฆ Iran will not yield to pressure. Our stance will not change,โ Khamenei said.
US State Department spokesman Ned Price said Khameneiโs comments โsounds like a threatโ and declined to respond to what he described as โhypotheticalsโ and โposturingโ.
He reiterated US willingness to engage in talks with Iran about returning to the 2015 nuclear deal.
The Biden administration said last week it was ready to talk to Iran about both nations returning to the accord abandoned by former US President Donald Trump.
Tehran said last week it was studying a European Union proposal for an informal meeting between current members of the deal and the United States, but has yet to respond to it.
Iran, which has resumed enriching to 20 per cent in an apparent bid to heap pressure on the United States, has been at loggerheads with Washington over which side should take the initial step to revive the accord.
Although under domestic pressure to ease economic hardships worsened by sanctions, Iranian leaders insist Washington must end its punitive campaign first to restore the deal, while Washington says Tehran must first return to full compliance.
DIPLOMACY PATH
Secretary of State Antony Blinken said on Monday Washington intended to bolster and extend the 2015 pact, which aimed to limit Iranโs enrichment potential โ a possible pathway to atomic bombs โ in exchange for a lifting of most sanctions.
Blinken, addressing the Conference on Disarmament in Geneva, said in a pre-recorded speech: โThe United States remains committed to ensuring that Iran never acquires a nuclear weapon. Diplomacy is the best path to achieve that goal.โ
Khamenei, in his televised remarks, repeated a denial of any Iranian intent to weaponise uranium enrichment.
He added: โThat international Zionist clown (Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu) has said they wonโt allow Iran to produce nuclear weapons. First of all, if we had any such intention, even those more powerful than him wouldnโt be able to stop us.โ
To pressure the Biden administration to drop sanctions, Iranโs hardline-dominated parliament passed a law last year obliging the government to end roving snap inspections by the UN nuclear watchdog from Tuesday if sanctions are not lifted.
REUTERS