Iran and the United Nations nuclear supervisory agency (IAEA) agreed on new frames to continue cooperating after a few months of tense relationship. Both sides admit that it is necessary to do a lot of work before international inspectors can return to the Iranian facilities, the RFI radio report.

The agreement was signed three months after a short 12 -day but intensive conflict with Israel, so some Iranian nuclear facilities were damaged. Since then, Iran has actually closed access to Iran.
The General Director of Magate Rafael Grossy expressed his cautious optimism, notifying administrative crimes for administrative crimes that the new “technical document” includes all Iran nuclear facilities and establishing clear inspection procedures. Tehran should also report on the subjects attacked in June, including nuclear materials.
However, Tehran emphasized that he has not agreed to open the door for international observers. Foreign Minister Abbas Arakchi explained that the agency's inspectors did not have access to Iran nuclear facilities outside the nuclear power plant in Bisha.
Access to other important objects, including enlargement wealthy factories in Fordo and Natanze, will become the topic of “future negotiations”.
Iran also warned that he would break the transaction if hostile actions were taken against him, including the re -introduction of the United Nations sanctions, removed as part of the 2015 nuclear transaction. Previously, Britain, France and Germany came up with such an opposite process, declaring that Tehran had abandoned his obligations.