Iran’s nuclear program can never be destroyed, and the United States will face consequences if it launches new attacks, Secretary of the Supreme National Security Council Ali Larijani said.
With UN sanctions on Iran set to be reinstated on September 28, Tehran will halt cooperation with the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA), Larijani warned.
“We have pursued every option and mechanism available to resolve this conflict peacefully,” he said in an interview with PBS’s Frontline, recorded on September 22 and partially aired Friday.

"If the Russian Federation and China want to help realize a durable, negotiated outcome on the Iranian nuclear issue, rather than seek to bolster an untenable status quo of flagrant Iranian efforts to undermine the global nonproliferation regime, then they must press leaders in Tehran to take meaningful immediate steps to fulfill its commitments and obligations, including by fully cooperating with the IAEA," the US envoy told the UN Security Council after voting against a resolution by Russia and China to delay the snapback of UN sanctions on Iran.
"The United Kingdom remains committed to pursuing a diplomatic solution that ensures Iran never acquires a nuclear weapon, while maintaining Iran's right to a civil nuclear program in line with the nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty," British ambassador to the UN Barbara Woodward told the Security Council.
"Our commitment to diplomacy remains steadfast," she said after voting against a Russian-Chinese drafted resolution to delay the snapback of UN sanctions on Iran 30 days after the three European powers triggered it.

The UN Security Council on Friday rejected a draft resolution by Russia and China to extend the Resolution 2231 and delay the snapback of Iran sanctions.
Nine member states voted against the resolution, four voted in favor and two abstained from voting.
Before the voting, the French envoy told the UN Security Council that Europeans "expected concrete and specific gestures. Iran did not, did not produce any such gestures."
"We sought an immediate agreement. Iran preferred to postpone everything until subsequent negotiations," the envoy said.
The UN Security Council has started a meeting to vote on a resolution drafted by Russia and China aimed at delaying the snapback of UN sanctions on Iran.
Russia's representative at the meeting said Moscow "had hoped that the US, that European colleagues in the US, would think twice and that they would opt for the path of diplomacy and dialog instead of their clumsy blackmail, which merely results in escalation of the situation in the region."
However, the envoy said, "what did we see instead, in the 29 days that have elapsed since then, was the very same typical scenario for Europeans of pressure."
The Russian envoy said that "if the UK and France were genuinely willing to meet their obligations, fulfill their promises and to reject the snapback given the constructive approach of Iran, then the vote on the Russian-Chinese draft gives them the last opportunity to demonstrate that they indeed take responsibility for their words."

The Chinese envoy said his country along with Russia "tabled this draft resolution on a six-month technical extension to Resolution 2231 encouraging Iran to further its engagement with the IAEA and urging the original signatories of the JCPOA to immediately restart negotiations."
"The draft resolution is not about picking sides between Iran and E3; it aims to get more time for diplomatic efforts and create conditions for a political solution," the envoy said.
"China calls on all Council members to vote in favor of the draft resolution... Let's work together to bring the Iranian nuclear issue back on the right track for political and diplomatic settlement."

A senior Iranian lawmaker on Friday rejected media reports about planned UN inspections of Iran’s nuclear facilities, calling them “sheer lies” and merely the fantasies of IAEA Director General Rafael Grossi.
“I spoke with the Atomic Energy Organization of Iran, and they confirmed there is no plan for IAEA inspections,” said Ebrahim Azizi, chairman of parliament’s National Security and Foreign Policy Commission.
"The presence of IAEA inspectors in Fordow and Natanz is a media lie and Rafael Grossi’s fantasy, because he wants to carry out the Americans’ mission and find out what is happening at our nuclear sites."





