US attacks in Iran mark ‘collapse in international order,’ FM Araghchi says
Iran has called on the United Nations to strongly condemn US airstrikes on its nuclear facilities, describing the attacks as a "flagrant violation of international law" in a formal letter from Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi to the UN Secretary-General and the Security Council president.
The letter, sent following US strikes on Iran’s Natanz, Isfahan, and Fordow nuclear sites on June 21, says the assault targeted peaceful nuclear infrastructure operating under IAEA safeguards and oversight.
Araghchi described the incident as an "act of aggression" by a nuclear-armed state against a non-nuclear one in full compliance with the Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT).
He added that the attack followed previous strikes by Israel, a country Iran widely known for possessing undeclared nuclear weapons and not being a party to the NPT.

Araghchi warned that the strikes pose serious humanitarian and environmental risks, citing international laws and IAEA resolutions that prohibit attacks on nuclear facilities.
"This reckless act marks an unprecedented collapse in the international order," Araghchi wrote, demanding the US be held accountable for what he called a "criminal assault" carried out in support of a government led by a "wanted war criminal."
Iran has requested the UN Security Council issue an “unambiguous and forceful condemnation” of the United States and warned that inaction could deepen global instability. Araghchi called for the letter to be circulated as an official Security Council document.