UN inspectors looking into allegations Iran worked on nuclear arms cautioned Monday that, despite progress this weekend, their long-stalled probe still had a long way to go to determine whether such suspicions are valid.
Iran says it does not want such arms, and agreed yesterday to answer some questions on suspicions that it worked on a detonator that could set off a nuclear charge.
But senior inspector Terjo Varjoranta said Tehran's concession was only "the first step," with many issues remaining.
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The Iranians also agreed to provide information on a site where Tehran experimented with laser uranium enrichment and allow a visit there.
While uranium enrichment is not directly linked to the IAEA's weapons probe, any hidden enrichment work would worry the United States and its allies. Iran says it is enriching only to make reactor fuel.
Washington and five other world powers are meeting February 18 with Iran in Vienna as they work to turn a first-step agreement into a pact that permanently curbs Iran's uranium enrichment in exchange for ending sanctions on the Islamic Republic.
Both sides say those talks are off to a promising start. But the US and its allies are looking to the IAEA-Iran meetings for additional signals that Iran is serious in wanting to ease tensions over its nuclear program.
In Tehran today, Iranian Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif said he did not expect a final deal from the Vienna talks, adding they are made "difficult" by Iranian distrust of the United States.