Iran now implicates US in Natanz electronic attack

The White House on Monday denied having played any role in a power outage at an Iranian nuclear site and declined to comment on whether Israeli sabotage was to blame or whether the incident might impair efforts to revive the 2015 Iran nuclear deal.

“The U.S. was not involved in any manner,” White House press secretary Jen Psaki said in response to questions. “We have nothing to add on speculation about the causes or the impacts.”

Iran accused arch-foe Israel of sabotaging the Natanz uranium enrichment plant and vowed revenge for an attack that appeared to be latest episode in a long-running covert war.

Israel opposes Tehran’s 2015 nuclear deal with major powers, an accord that Iran and U.S. President Joe Biden are trying to revive after his predecessor, Donald Trump, abandoned it three years ago.

Israel, whose existence Iran does not recognize, has yet to formally comment, but multiple Israeli media outlets quoted unnamed intelligence sources as saying Israel’s Mossad spy service successfully sabotaged the underground complex.

Iran and the major powers described as “constructive” the talks last week to salvage the nuclear deal, whose core bargain involved limiting Iran’s nuclear activities in return for the lifting of U.S. and other international sanctions.

Trump reneged on the pact in 2018 by reimposing harsh U.S. economic sanctions, prompting Iran to breach many of the nuclear restrictions from 2019.

The indirect talks in Vienna, in which mainly European diplomats are shuttling between the remaining parties to the deal and the United States, are expected to resume on Wednesday.

Psaki said she expected them to be “difficult and long,” adding “we have not been given any indication about a change in participation,” by Iran.

A U.S. official speaking on condition of anonymity said Washington had no reason to believe Tehran would change its approach because of the Natanz incident, but added “it’s too soon to say.”

He also echoed the view put forward last week by a senior State Department official that Tehran’s demands that Washington remove all sanctions imposed by the Trump administration since 2017 would lead to an impasse.

“If their position is ...we have to lift everything, and we have to lift it up front, and then they verify it, and then they take their first step, that’s a recipe for paralysis,” he said. “We hope that they will take a more pragmatic approach.”

Source: Reuters

 

The Liberum

The subtitle of The Liberum ("the voice of the people is the voice of God") reflects the concept that the collective opinions and will of the people carry divine importance. They embody truth and wisdom, particularly in a non-partisan arena that profiles itself as a marketplace of free ideas and thoughts.
See full bio >
The Liberum runs on your donation. Fight with us for a free society.
Donation Form (#6)

More articles you might like

When the verdict has already been written before the investigation began

I am asked how I can stand up for Jews in general and Israel in […]

Ides of November – Another scolding meta-narrative from the 1990s

Watched a rather bizarre movie the other day, The November Men (1993), that purports to […]

Inventing the Promised Land

From Ramses to Trump: How a Biblical Narrative Became Modern Geopolitics According to the biblical […]

Turkey at Israel’s border: Trump’s Ankara visit and the post-Iran Middle East struggle

As Donald Trump arrived in Ankara this week to reset relations with Turkey, the visit […]

The South Caucasus as Europe’s strategic gateway: The importance of the EU–Azerbaijan partnership in the Turkic World

The visit of European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen to Baku on 1 July […]

How Syria’s Ahmad Al-Sharaa’s armed order is redefining power under Western and Gulf influence

What is unfolding in Syria today can be most accurately understood not as a conventional […]