There won’t be new Council resolution of the governors against him Iran this week in Vienna despite the escalation in his subject of its nuclear programfollowing “concrete agreements” reached this weekend in Tehran by its head International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA)according to diplomatic sources.

“There will be no resolution,” three Western diplomats told AFP today during the first day of the meeting in Vienna, the headquarters of the IAEA.

Vigilance remains, however, as Iran is used to this kind of maneuvering to avoid a recall to the order, such as in November 2022, one of them said.

The director general of the UN agency, Rafael Grossi, traveled to Tehran on Friday and Saturday. There he met with President Ibrahim Raisi, amid growing concerns about the progress of Iran’s nuclear program.

Back in Vienna, Grossi said the Islamic Republic had agreed to reconnect surveillance cameras at several nuclear facilities.

It also decided to increase inspections at the underground Fordow plant, where uranium particles enriched to 83.7% were recently found, just below the 90% threshold required to make an atomic bomb.

“These are not promises, we have some agreements that are concrete,” Grossi said today, pressed by questions from reporters seeking details.

“I am as disappointed as many, maybe even more disappointed, when there are no results. It seems we are moving towards more solid ground,” he insisted, asking for time.

According to diplomatic sources interviewed, “it remains to be seen whether the elements discussed in Tehran will result in real progress.” “We have seen so many similar steps in the past,” they warned.

An IAEA technical team is now expected in Iran to clarify the various points.

Today, Foreign Ministry spokesman Nasser Kanani expressed hope that Grossi’s visit would pave the way for renewed negotiations to revive the 2015 agreement.

This agreement, known as the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action (JCPOA), limited the activities of Iran’s nuclear program in exchange for a lifting of international sanctions. However, the deal is collapsing after the US withdrew from the accord in 2018 under President Donald Trump and Washington reinstated sanctions against Tehran.

Talks on reviving the agreement, involving Tehran and the contracting parties (China, Russia, Britain, France and Germany), with the indirect participation of the US, have been at a standstill since the summer of 2022.