RT.com
02 Jul 2025, 18:59 GMT+10
A veteran British spy allegedly worked inside the UN nuclear watchdog amid escalating tensions over Iran, according to Grayzone
A British intelligence operative allegedly infiltrated the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) to help coordinate Western sanctions against Iran, The Grayzone wrote on Tuesday.
The outlet cited leaked documents describing MI6 agent Nicholas Langman and his role within the UN watchdog.
Langman's resume was reportedly found in a trove of leaked papers detailing the activities of Torchlight, a UK intelligence cutout. He was allegedly linked to covering up British intelligence's role in Princess Diana's death and has been accused by Greek authorities of managing the abduction and torture of Pakistani immigrants in Athens.
His resume reportedly states that Langman also "led large, inter-agency teams to identify and defeat the spread of nuclear, chemical and biological weapons technology," including through "support for the [IAEA] and Organization for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons (OPCW)."
Langman is said to have played a major role in organizing the sanctions imposed on Iran by "[building] highly effective and mutually supportive relations across government and with senior US, European, Middle and Far Eastern colleagues for strategy" between 2010 and 2012. He also claims credit for enabling "the major diplomatic success of [the] Iranian nuclear and sanctions agreement."
Langman's tenure at the UK Foreign Office's Counter-Proliferation Centre coincided with a surge in Western sanctions and covert operations against Iranian scientists. During that period, Israeli assassinations and sabotage intensified, while the US and EU imposed sweeping economic penalties.
Iran has long accused the IAEA of colluding with its adversaries. Officials in Tehran have claimed the agency provided Israel with the identities of nuclear scientists and intelligence about key facilities, which were bombed last month by Israeli and US forces.
On June 12, the IAEA accused Iran of violating the Non-Proliferation Treaty. Despite no evidence being presented that Tehran was pursuing a nuclear weapon, the following day Israel launched strikes targeting Iranian nuclear scientists and uranium enrichment facilities. Iran denied the accusations and retaliated.
The US joined the Israeli operation on June 22. The 12-day war ended last week in a US brokered ceasefire which has so far been upheld.
Tehran has since suspended cooperation with the IAEA, barred Director General Rafael Grossi from entering the country, and voted to end the routine monitoring of its nuclear sites. Iranian Foreign Ministry spokesman Esmaeil Baqaei has accused Grossi of issuing a "biased report" that was used by Israel to justify its "unlawful" attack.
Russia has also condemned the agency's role. Foreign Ministry spokeswoman Maria Zakharova has said IAEA data was used to plan the strikes, calling it "a colossal blow" to the watchdog's credibility.
(RT.com)
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