Tehran Evaluates Strategic Withdrawal From Global Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty Amid Sustained Aerial Offensive
Tehran lawmakers mull an emergency plan to withdraw from the NPT and forge new nuclear partnerships with BRICS nations amid the ongoing war.
By: AXL Media
Published: Mar 29, 2026, 3:45 AM EDT
Source: Information for this report was sourced from Anadolu Agency

The Legislative Push for Nuclear Sovereignty
The Iranian parliament has initiated an urgent review of the country’s participation in the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty, signaling a potential end to decades of international nuclear diplomacy. According to reports from the semi-official Tasnim News Agency on Saturday, multiple government bodies in Tehran are currently debating a total withdrawal from the global pact. This legislative maneuver suggests that the Iranian leadership is seeking to remove the legal and inspections-based shackles that have governed its atomic ambitions, viewing the NPT as an impediment to national security during a time of active warfare.
A Three-Tiered Emergency Plan for Nuclear Rights
Details of a strategic "emergency plan" have begun to emerge, championed by prominent figures such as Tehran Deputy Malek Shariati. The roadmap for this transition focuses on three critical pillars: the formal declaration of NPT withdrawal, the immediate cancellation of laws tied to the 2014 nuclear deal’s implementation, and the establishment of a new domestic framework for atomic development. By dismantling these existing legal structures, Iran aims to consolidate its nuclear assets under a wartime command, effectively ending the era of transparency that defined its previous engagement with Western powers.
Seeking New Alliances Within the BRICS and Shanghai Blocs
Central to Tehran’s new strategy is a pivot away from Western-led agreements toward a fresh international coalition centered on the BRICS nations and the Shanghai Cooperation Organization. The proposed plan envisions the development of "peaceful nuclear technologies" in direct collaboration with partners such as Russia, China, India, and Brazil. This move is designed to create a parallel nuclear oversight and development ecosystem that bypasses traditional Western sanctions and monitoring, potentially providing Iran with the technical support necessary to advance its program despite the ongoing conflict.
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