Statement by Ambassador at the Security Council
meeting on the implementation of resolution 2231
I join others in thanking USG Rosemary DiCarlo for her briefing.
We welcome the Secretary General’s thirteenth report on the
implementation of resolution 2231 and thank the UN Secretariat
for their continued professionalism and support.
Thanks also to Ambassador Byrne-Nason and His Excellency Olaf
Skoog for their briefings and again to Ambassador Byrne-Nason for
her, and her team’s work, as 2231 Facilitator.
It is important that we are clear: Iran’s nuclear programme has
never been more advanced than it is today and Iran’s nuclear
escalation is a threat to international peace and security.
Iran has continued to improve its enrichment capabilities through
developing, installing and using new advanced centrifuges; it has
continued its rapid accumulation of uranium enriched up to 20%
and highly enriched uranium up to 60%; and has continued to
curtail IAEA monitoring, most recently switching off twenty-seven
monitoring cameras from 8 June. Iran has also been producing
uranium metal, which provides weapons-applicable knowledge.
At the current enrichment rate, by the end of this year, Iran is
likely to have enough enriched material to rapidly produce HEU at
90% enrichment for several nuclear devices. Iran also continues
to develop ballistic missiles in a way that is inconsistent with
Annex B of resolution 2231.
Iran’s nuclear escalation is undermining international peace and
security and the global non-proliferation system and is in clear
violation of resolution 2231.
President, there has been a deal on the table since March,
following a year of intensive negotiations. At that point, there
was a viable deal, which would return Iran to compliance with its
commitments and the US to the deal - reversing Iran’s nuclear
escalation and lifting US sanctions related to the JCPoA.
However, Iran is refusing to take the opportunity, while making
demands beyond the scope of the JCPoA. Iran should urgently take
this deal. There will not be a better one and if a deal is not
struck then Iran’s nuclear escalation will cause the JCPoA to
collapse. In that scenario, it will be incumbent on this Council
to take decisive steps to ensure Iran does not develop a nuclear
weapon.