Timeline: Iran's nuclear program
(Reuters) - Iran has agreed to resolve lingering questions about past secret nuclear work within a month, the International Atomic Energy Agency said on Sunday, pointing to concrete results of rare high-level talks in Tehran.
Here is a chronology of events since it emerged that Iran was carrying out sensitive work that it could use to make atomic bombs.
August 2002 - The exiled opposition National Council of Resistance of Iran reports the existence of uranium enrichment facility at Natanz and heavy water plant at Arak.
December 2002 - The United States accuses Iran of "across-the-board pursuit of weapons of mass destruction".
June 2003 - An IAEA report, after February inspection of Natanz and Arak, says Iran has failed to comply with nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty.
November 2004 - Iran promises EU negotiators it will suspend all nuclear fuel processing and reprocessing work.
September 2, 2005 - IAEA report confirms Iran has resumed uranium conversion at Isfahan.
January 10, 2006 - Iran removes U.N. seals at Natanz enrichment plant and resumes nuclear fuel research.
February 4 - IAEA votes to report Iran to the U.N. Security Council. Iran ends snap U.N. nuclear inspections the next day.
February 14 - Iran restarts small-scale feeding of uranium gas into centrifuges at Natanz after two-and-a-half year suspension.
April 11 - Iran announces it has produced low-grade enriched uranium suitable for use in power stations; IAEA confirms.
June 5 - EU foreign policy chief Javier Solana delivers a package of incentives from world powers if Iran agrees to halt uranium enrichment.
August 31 - IAEA announces Iran has not met a deadline to suspend its atomic fuel program.
December 23 - Security Council votes for sanctions and gives 60 days to suspend enrichment. Iran calls the resolution illegal.
March 24, 2007 - The Security Council unanimously approves further arms and financial sanctions against Iran.
April 18 - IAEA says Iran has begun making nuclear fuel in its underground uranium enrichment plant. Continued...




