Iran and six world powers have reached a preliminary nuclear agreement outlining commitments by both sides as they work for a comprehensive deal aiming at curbing nuclear activities Tehran could use to make weapons and providing sanctions relief for Iran.
A look at the main points of the yesterday's agreement released by the US State Department on behalf of the six powers negotiating with Iran at the talks Iran, the United States, Russia, Britain, France and Germany to be implemented by June 30 as part of a comprehensive agreement:
Centrifuges can be used to enrich uranium to levels ranging from uses in energy, medicine and science to weapons-grade used in nuclear warheads.
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The June deal aims at restricting the number of centrifuges standing to 6,104, and those running to 5,060. All will be mainstay IR-1- models, Iran's present workhorse, which enriches at much lower rates that the more developed machines Tehran would like to install.
Iran has committed to enriching uranium substantially below weapons-grade and to reduce its enriched uranium stockpile from about five tons to 300 kilograms (less than 700 pounds) for 15 years.
Experts assess Iran's current breakout time, the time it could enrich enough uranium for one weapon, at two to three months. That timeline will be extended to at least a year for at least 10 years, according to a fact sheet on the commitments, which does not detail how that will be accomplished beyond reducing uranium numbers and stockpiles.
The Fordo enrichment facility is dug deep into a mountainside and is thought impervious to air attack, an option neither the United States nor Israel has ruled out should diplomatic efforts to contain Tehran's atomic assets fail.
Iran commits not to enrich uranium there for at least 15 years and will convert the site into a nuclear physics and technology research center.
It also commits Tehran not to do uranium enrichment- related research and development or store fissile material at Fordo for 15 years.
Centrifuges will still run at Fordo, one Western official told The Associated Press that almost 1,000 of the machines will be spinning. But they will not enrich uranium. Instead, the official said, they will produce isotopes for medical, industrial and research uses.
The UN's International Atomic Energy Agency will monitor enrichment and former enrichment facilities and related assets using "the most up-to-date, modern monitoring technologies."
It also agrees to implement an agreement with the IAEA giving the agency "much greater access and information regarding Iran's nuclear program, including both declared and (possible) undeclared facilities," than it has now.