In an interview with Iranian television, Araghchi said: "We currently have no program to receive Grossi. The issue of inspectors must also be studied to determine its compliance with the law passed by the Iranian parliament."
He explained: "It's clear that they want to inspect nuclear facilities to assess the extent of damage. While the damage was significant, allowing inspection teams to precisely evaluate the losses requires a decision that aligns with parliament's law."
Araghchi noted that the Iranian parliament had prohibited cooperation with the IAEA, including halting inspections, following attacks on Iran's nuclear facilities.
He added: "The relationship between Tehran and the IAEA has taken on a new character after parliament's decision. This law hasn't completely closed the path, as it authorizes Iran's Supreme National Security Council to make decisions in this regard."
The foreign minister called for further legal study of parliament's decision to regulate Tehran's relationship with the IAEA accordingly.
Araghchi criticized: "Parliament took this decision because of Grossi's report, which laid the groundwork for an anti-Iran resolution at the IAEA Board of Governors. This ultimately provided justification for Israel's attacks on Iranian nuclear facilities. All this stems from Grossi's lack of honesty and fairness in his reporting."
Recent Developments:
Iran's Guardian Council recently approved legislation suspending government cooperation with the IAEA.
The bill passed unanimously (221 votes) in Iran's Islamic Consultative Assembly (parliament) yesterday.
This follows attacks on Iran's Fordow, Natanz, and Isfahan nuclear facilities last Sunday by U.S. forces, after previous Israeli strikes.
Since the 13th of this month, Tehran and other Iranian cities faced large-scale attacks by Israeli forces, met with Iranian missile strikes on occupied territories.
A ceasefire between Iran and Israel took effect Tuesday morning after U.S. President Donald Trump announced a "complete and comprehensive" agreement, ending mutual bombardments that began on the 13th.