Iran convened an emergency parliament
On December 1, the Iranian parliament passed a bill on Tuesday that would end UN inspections of its nuclear facilities and require that those who sign the 2015 nuclear agreement in Europe cannot be sanctioned from oil and banks. To obtain relief, the Iranian government will increase uranium enrichment reserves. The vote to debate the bill needs to go through several other stages before it becomes an implementation plan. This is a contempt for Israel and the United States after the killing of a famous Iranian nuclear scientist last month.
Protests and demonstrations broke out in Iran
Iran held a 290-seat House of Representatives. 251 members voted in favor. Since then, many Iranian parliamentarians have begun to chant "America must die!" and "Israel must die!" The bill will be given to European countries. Three months to relax sanctions on Iran’s key oil and gas sector and restore its access to the international banking system. After President Donald Trump of the United States unilaterally withdrew from the nuclear agreement, the United States imposed severe sanctions on Iran, triggering a series of escalations between the two sides.
Previously the Director General of the International Atomic Energy Agency visited Iran.
The bill will enable the Iranian authorities to restore uranium enrichment to 20%, which is lower than the amount of enriched uranium required for nuclear weapons, but higher than the level required for civilian applications. Generally 20% is used In the nuclear submarine nuclear reactor facility. At the same time, Iran will also commission new centrifuges at the nuclear facility in Natanz and the underground Fodor site. The bill will need to be voted by parliament again and approved by the Guardianship Board of the constitutional watchdog.
The bill was first submitted to Parliament in August, but it gained new momentum after Israel and the United States murdered the Iranian nuclear scientist Fahrizad. A project led by Fahrizad, claimed in Israel and the West as a military operation, focused on the feasibility of making nuclear weapons. The International Atomic Energy Agency said that the "Structured Program" ended in 2003. US intelligence agencies agreed to this assessment in a 2007 report.
Iran’s nuclear facilities have always been a major concern for the United States
Israel insists that Iran still maintains its ambitions to develop nuclear weapons, pointing out Iran’s ballistic missile program and research on other technologies. Iran has long insisted that its nuclear program is for peaceful purposes. Iran blames the killing of nuclear scientist Fahzadi on Israel, which has long been engaged in secret wars with Iran and its agents in the region. Israeli officials declined to comment on the killing, and no one claimed responsibility.
After the United States resumed sanctions, Iran began to publicly exceed the uranium enrichment level set by the nuclear agreement. Currently, Iran has upgraded uranium enrichment to a purity of 4.5%. Although American experts warned that Iran now has enough low-enriched uranium, if it chooses to manufacture nuclear bombs, it can have at least two atomic bombs and can also reprocess it into fuel, but Iran’s currently enriched uranium is still far less than 90% of weapons. Grade level.