 Tehran has admitted producing plutonium, the IAEA says |
After the UN's nuclear watchdog votes to censure Iran over its nuclear programme, BBC News Online looks at some of the key moments in the crisis. September 2002: Russia begins preparations for a reactor worth $800m near Iran's south-western port of Bushehr. The plan at this stage is to have the plant up and running by the end of 2003.
December 2002: The US accuses Iran of seeking to develop a secret nuclear weapons programme and publishes satellite images of two nuclear sites under construction at Natanz and Arak.
February - May 2003: The UN's International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) conducts a series of inspections in Iran. The country confirms that there are sites at Natanz and Arak under construction, but insists that these - like Bushehr - are designed solely to provide fuel for future power plants.
16 June, 2003: IAEA head Mohammed ElBaradei states that inspections showed "Iran failed to report certain nuclear materials and activities" and urges "co-operative actions" on the part of Iran. However the report does not declare Iran in breach of the Non-Proliferation Treaty.
EU foreign ministers meanwhile call on Iran to allow tougher nuclear inspections.
19 June, 2003: White House spokesman Ari Fleischer refuses to rule out the "military option" in dealing with Iran.
July 2003: IAEA begins a fresh round of inspections in Iran.
September 2003: Washington says Iran is not complying with international non-proliferation accords but agrees to support a proposal from Britain, France and Germany to give the country until the end of October fully to disclose nuclear activities and allow surprise inspections.
13 October, 2003: Russia says it has delayed plans to start up a nuclear reactor in Iran by a year but stresses this is for technical reasons, not because of external political pressure.
19 October, 2003: Officials in Tehran hold negotiations with IAEA envoys on signing an agreement to allow tougher inspections of its nuclear facilities.
21 October, 2003: Iran's Foreign Minister Kamal Kharrazi promises "total transparency" over the country's nuclear programme during talks with his counterparts from Britain, France and Germany.
Shortly afterwards, a diplomat in Tehran says Iran has agreed to suspend the enrichment of uranium, and will sign an agreement allowing tougher UN inspections of its nuclear sites - two key demands of the IAEA.
24 October, 2003: Protest in Tehran against the decision to sign up to inspections.
31 October, 2003: The IAEA says Iran has submitted a "comprehensive" declaration on its nuclear programme.
10 November, 2003: Iran states again that it is suspending uranium enrichment and intends to allow tougher UN inspections of its nuclear facilities.
11 November, 2003: The IAEA says in a report that Iran has admitted that it has produced plutonium - a material that could be used in nuclear weapons, but adds there is no evidence that the country is trying to build an atomic bomb.
13 November, 2003: Washington dismisses the report, which it says it finds "impossible to believe". The UN stands by the report.
25 November, 2003: Britain, France and Germany reach an agreement with the US on a UN resolution to warn Iran over its nuclear activities.
26 November, 2003: The IAEA votes to pass the resolution censuring Iran, but stops short of recommending sanctions.