Iran’s mission to the United Nations in Vienna said Monday that expecting Tehran to continue its voluntary commitments under the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT) is “unjustified” while its treaty rights are ignored and its nuclear sites are targeted by a non-member state.
The statement, cited by Iranian state media, comes amid growing internal calls for Iran to withdraw from the NPT. On Monday, Foreign Ministry spokesman Esmaeil Baghaei confirmed that parliament is preparing a bill to leave the treaty, while reiterating Iran’s opposition to weapons of mass destruction.
Separately, a member of parliament’s national security committee said the draft bill could be introduced as early as Tuesday.

Israel's military said that it had struck around 100 military targets in central Iran on Sunday, including dismantling more than 20 surface-to-surface missiles minutes before their planned launch toward Israeli territory.
According to the Israel Defense Forces (IDF), roughly 50 fighter jets and aircraft participated in the operation, focusing on missile storage facilities and launchers in and around the city of Isfahan.
“With this, we can now say that one-third of the Iranian regime’s missile launchers have been dismantled,” the IDF said in a statement posted on X.
The announcement comes after Iranian state media reported that air defense systems engaged and destroyed incoming projectiles near the Natanz nuclear facility overnight.
Police in Iran’s Ardabil province, in the country’s northwest, arrested five individuals on Monday on charges of “disturbing public opinion,” the provincial police commander said, according to state media.
The arrests come amid a broader crackdown on expressions of dissent following Israeli strikes on Iranian targets. Over the weekend, police in Hormozgan province said they had identified 14 individuals accused of spreading disinformation and expressing support for Israel online.
Authorities said those suspects were being pursued for “spreading rumors and disturbing public opinion,” and warned that supporting Israel on social media could carry a prison sentence of two to five years.
International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) Director General Rafael Grossi said Monday that the ongoing military escalation between Israel and Iran is disrupting essential diplomatic efforts aimed at preventing Iran from acquiring nuclear weapons.
“This military escalation delays indispensable work towards a diplomatic solution for the long-term assurance that Iran does not acquire a nuclear weapon,” Grossi said, during an exceptional meeting of the IAEA Board of Governors in Vienna.
Grossi confirmed that four buildings at Iran’s Isfahan site were damaged in Friday’s Israeli strikes, including a uranium conversion facility, a fuel manufacturing plant, a central chemical laboratory, and a UF4 to EU metal processing facility. However, he noted that no damage had been observed at the Fordow fuel enrichment plant or the Khondab heavy water reactor, which is still under construction.
The IAEA chief said the agency remains present in Iran and that inspections would resume “as soon as safety conditions allow,” in line with Tehran’s obligations under the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT). “I am in touch with the inspectors on the ground; their safety remains our top priority,” he added.
Grossi also acknowledged ongoing cooperation and information sharing between the Iranian authorities and the IAEA.

Israel's military said on Monday its air force struck a building near Tehran used by Iran’s intelligence services, killing four senior officials, including the head of the Revolutionary Guards' intelligence organization.
According to an Israel Defense Forces (IDF) statement, the strike killed Mohammad Kazemi, head of the Revolutionary Guards’ intelligence unit, his deputy Mohammad Hassan Mohaqeq, as well as the head and deputy of the Quds Force intelligence directorate, Mohsen Bagheri and Abu al-Fadl Nikouei.
Earlier, IRGC-affiliated Fars News reported that Sarfaraz Hossein Nikouei, described as a “prominent and experienced intelligence officer” with Iran’s Revolutionary Guards, was killed in an Israeli strike on Sunday.
“These senior officials played a central role in shaping Iran’s threat assessments and planning terror operations against Israel, the West, and regional countries,” the IDF said.
The Israeli military added that the strike severely damaged Iran’s intelligence capabilities and follows the assassination of the Iranian military’s chief intelligence officer on Friday.
IDF's announcement comes a day after Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu confirmed in an interview with Fox News that Israel killed Kazemi and Mohaqeq in a strike in Tehran.
Iran’s judiciary chief Gholamhossein Mohseni Ejei on Monday ordered rapid prosecution and punishment for anyone found cooperating with Israel, warning that wartime conditions require immediate legal action.
“If anyone is found to have collaborated with the Zionist regime, they must be swiftly tried and punished without delay,” Ejei said during a high-level judicial meeting in Tehran.
He warned that those attempting to exploit the current situation to destabilize the country—whether through physical or psychological means—would face “the most severe penalties under the law.”






