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Iran Has Drones With 7,000 km Range, Guards Commander Claims

Iran has developed drones with a range of 7,000 km (4,375 miles), Iranian state media cited the top commander of the Revolutionary Guards as saying on Sunday, a development which may be seen by Washington as a threat to regional stability.

Tehran's assertion comes as Iran and six major powers are in talks to revive the 2015 nuclear deal that former US President Donald Trump exited three years ago and imposed sanctions. Independent observers and media are not allowed to verify such claims.

Western military analysts say Iran sometimes exaggerates its capabilities, but drones are a key element in Tehran's surveillance and power projection, especially in the Gulf waters around the Strait of Hormuz, through which a fifth of the world's oil supply flows.

Iran and regional forces it backs have increasingly relied on drones in Yemen, Syria, Iraq in recent years. Yeme's Houthis often launch armed drones with Iranian origin against targets in Saudi Arabia.

"We have unmanned aerial vehicles (drones) with long range of 7,000 kilometres. They can fly, return home, and make landing wherever they are planned to," the Guards commander-in-chief Hossein Salami was quoted as saying by state-controlled media.

US President Joe Biden is seeking to revive and eventually broaden the nuclear pact to put greater limits on Iran's nuclear and missile programmes, as well as constraining its activities.

Tehran has ruled out negotiations over ballistic missiles and its role in the Middle East, where Sh'ite-led Iran and Sunni Saudi Arabia have been involved in proxy wars. 

With reporting by Reuters

Iran's Currency Hits Low Point As Nuclear Talks Remain In Limbo

Iran’s currency the rial dropped to its lowest point since October 2020, by crossing the 280,000-rial mark against the US dollar on Tuesday, as hopes for a breakthrough in nuclear talks with world powers faded.

Currency exchange websites said that the reason for the 1.4 percent decline in one day was a negative comment by UN’s International Atomic Energy Agency yesterday, which said Iran has not fully honored a deal made on September 12.

Iran’s battered currency that has declined ninefold since 2017 is sensitive to news about the dispute Iran has over its nuclear program with the United States and its European allies.

The rial began to nosedive at the end of 2017 when former US president Donald Trump signaled his intention to withdraw from the 2015 nuclear deal, the JCPOA. After formal withdrawal in May 2018, the United States imposed heavy economic sanctions, gradually banning Iranian crude oil exports.

With Joe Biden assuming the presidency, a round of talks began in Vienna to restore the JCPOA, but Tehran has suspended the negotiations with no clear date of when it would return.

Iran’s currency has steadily fallen since the Islamic Republic was established in 1979, dropping from 70 rials during the last years of the monarchy to the current 280,000 rials to the dollar.

 

Iran Must Return To Talks To Avoid Escalation, Says French Official

Iran must return to talks with world powers over its 2015 nuclear deal to avoid an escalation, a French presidency official was quoted by Reuters as saying on Tuesday, adding that there was no need to set new conditions because the parameters for an accord were clear.

The official told reporters that world powers negotiating with Iran needed to remain united and that China especially needed to "express itself and act in a more determined way."

French Foreign Minister Jean-Yves Le Drian told the UN General Assembly on Monday that the international community must make sure Iran reaches an agreement with world powers on its nuclear program. 

“Iran cannot be allowed to think any longer that time is on its side because the more dangerous its nuclear program becomes, the greater the risk of a major crisis,” Le Drian told the Assembly.

Iran in June suspended negotiations with world powers taking place in Vienna since April, saying its new president elected that month needed time ot form a government.

The United States, the United Kingdom, France and Germany that were the original signatories of the 2015 nuclear agreement, JCPOA, have become apprehensive as Tehran continues to enrich uranium without resuming the talks.

Iran Rejects US Call For UN Inspectors' Access To Nuclear Site

Iran on Tuesday rejected a US call to grant UN inspectors access to a nuclear site, saying Washington was not qualified to demand inspections without condemning a sabotage attack on the facility, Iranian state media reported.

"Countries that did not condemn terrorist acts against Iran's nuclear site are not qualified to comment on inspections there," Mohammad Eslami, head of the Atomic Energy Organization of Iran, said during a visit to Moscow, according to Iranian state news agency IRNA.

The United States said on Monday that Iran must stop denying the U.N. nuclear watchdog access to a workshop making centrifuge parts as agreed two weeks ago or face diplomatic retaliation at the agency's Board of Governors meeting.

The workshop at the TESA Karaj complex makes components for centrifuges, machines that enrich uranium, and was hit by apparent sabotage in June in which one of four International Atomic Energy Agency cameras there was destroyed. Iran removed them and the destroyed camera's footage is missing.

Key Iranian nuclear, military and industrial sites have been targets of sabotage operations since July 2020, with two explosions at the Natanz uranium enrichment facility and toher incidents. Iran's top nuclear official Mohsen Fakhrizadeh was assassinated in November 2020 in what a high-tech operation reportedly by Israel.

Reporting by Reuters

Iran Nuclear Chief In Moscow To Hold Talks On Cooperation

Iran's vice president and head of the country's atomic energy organization, Mohammad Eslami, has arrived in Moscow for talks with the chief executive of Russian state nuclear firm Rosatom, the RIA news agency cited Iran's embassy as saying on Tuesday.

Eslami plans to discuss cooperation between the two countries in the nuclear power sector, it said. Russia is a diplomatic ally of the Islamic Republic and a military ally in Syria.

Russia built Iran's only nuclear reactor in Bushehr after the 1979 revolution that prevented Western firms to complete the project started during the reign of Mohammad Reza Shah, the last king of Iran. Tehran has started construction of at least one other reactor at the same location.

It is not clear if Eslami will also hold discussions with Russian officials on the stalled nuclear talks with the United States and its European allies in Vienna. 

Tehran stopped the talks in June saying its new president, Ebrahim Raisi, needed time to form a government, but after more than a month of forming a cabinet, Tehran has not announced a date for its return to the talks.

France Calls On International Community To Stand Firm On Iran Nukes

The international community must make sure Iran reaches an agreement with world powers on its nuclear program, French Foreign Minister Jean-Yves Le Drian told the UN General Assembly on Monday.

“Iran cannot be allowed to think any longer that time is on its side because the more dangerous its nuclear program becomes, the greater the risk of a major crisis,” Le Drian told the Assembly.

Iran in June suspended negotiations with world powers taking place in Vienna since April, saying its new president elected that month needed time to form a government.

The United States, the United Kingdom, France and Germany that were the original signatories of the 2015 nuclear agreement, JCPOA, have become apprehensive as Tehran continues to enrich uranium without resuming the talks.

“France will do everything it possibly can to encourage dialogue, but the only possible way forward remains an agreement, making it possible to establish that Iran is once again upholding its obligations. It is therefore essential that negotiations resume very quickly,” the French foreign minister said.

Israel  has said it cannot accept the risk of a nuclear Iran and will do anything needed to stop Tehran from acquiring a nuclear bomb.