Tehran – A modern world made with Western imagery, there was always an enforcer. Under the banner of international law, he was the one who mainly served the interests of Western powers and their precious colonial venture, Israel.
The current director of the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) is one of these people. But he is his own league. The dishonor of Rafael Grossi, his pure audacity, and the complete lack of genuine concern for the very laws that he is entrusted with agreeing to even the most awful Western puppet he has before him.
Due to Grossi’s report of politically motivating, the IAEA Commission passed an anti-Iranian resolution on June 12, alleging its violation of Iran’s nuclear obligations. Within a day, Israel launched a series of aggressive actions on Iranian soil, targeting high-ranking military figures, nuclear scientists, civilians, and the country’s nuclear sites. Less than 10 days after Israel’s first attack, the American B-2 bombers once again attacked Iran’s nuclear facilities. Both regimes cited Iran’s “non-compliant” actions as justification for their strike.
Despite the clear illegality of these attacks under international law, Grossi presented no condemnation. In an interview released after the strike, he acknowledged that the UN nuclear watchdog had no evidence of Iran’s pursuit of nuclear weapons. Still, damage has occurred. Grossi had already provided an excuse for Israeli and the US attacks, and was well aware that his unfounded reporting would serve this purpose.
Today, former Argentine diplomats are laying the foundation for attacks on Iran’s cultural heritage. He levelles the accusations that Iran moved uranium enriched in an “ancient” site near Esfahan to a “ancient” site. Grossi once again fully recognizes the meaning of his actions. If his statement contributes to an attack on Iranian heritage – the acts that are illegal under international law and previously only adopted by terrorist groups like al-Qaeda and Dash, his consequences must extend far beyond mere travel bans to Iran.
In a post on X, former Iranian foreign minister Mohammad Javad Zarif called for an alternative to Grossi in the IAEA. The request has recently warned that UN agencies are at risk of becoming irrelevant under Grossi’s leadership, reflecting this demand.
“Rafael Grossi, who bets innocent massacres through fictional IAEA reports, is plotting to cause more war crimes through reckless meditations about Iran hiding uranium at Isfahan’s global genetic site,” Zarif writes. “The IAEA should remove this dishonor.”
