Iran Sets Conditions for Reducing Uranium Enrichment to 3.67%

Iranian Foreign Ministry spokesman Ismail Baqaei confirmed that Iran will not agree to reduce uranium enrichment to the level of 3.67% unless a comprehensive agreement is reached that preserves its right to enrich domestically.
Baqaei stated in a statement to The Guardian: "The Europeans are currently agents of the United States and Israel, and this creates a trust gap between the inspectors of the International Atomic Energy Agency and Iran, raising concerns about the transfer of information to Israel."
He pointed out that the Iranian parliament may pass a law to withdraw from the Treaty on the Non-Proliferation of Nuclear Weapons in response to the re-imposition of international sanctions by Europe, emphasizing that the Iranian constitution will prevent any obstruction of this decision.
Baqaei added: "The Europeans are doing what Trump dictates to them, and their role is in continuous decline."
This statement comes in the context of previous warnings from Russia's permanent representative to international organizations in Vienna, Mikhail Ulyanov, that any attempt by France, Britain, and Germany to restore sanctions against Iran through the 'Snapback' mechanism would violate international law.