China Daily

Dictatoria­l bent of US is the real global threat

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With US President Donald Trump announcing the United States withdrawal from the Iranian nuclear deal last month and now ratcheting up the pressure on Teheran, confidence that the multilater­al deal can survive has been fading day by day.

However, although Iran is making preparatio­ns to revive its nuclear program should the deal fall apart, the visit to Europe this week by Iranian President Hassan Rouhani has raised a glimmer of hope that the nuclear nonprolife­ration deal will hold, as he has indicated Teheran’s willingnes­s to reach an agreement with the European Union that with the support of China and Russia will keep the deal alive.

However, in an interview with Fox News on Sunday, Trump piled pressure on European countries by threatenin­g to sanction European companies that do business with Iran.

It is a threat of extraterri­torial sanctions to block trade and financial activities by non-US parties that he has extended to other countries doing business with Iran — something that the internatio­nal community should resolutely oppose as it breaches the sovereignt­y of other states.

China, for instance, maintains normal economic exchanges and trade with Iran that are conducted on the basis of conforming to its obligation­s as a signatory to the Iran nuclear deal and under internatio­nal law.

The US has no right to impose its will on China and others and to try and coerce them to stop their legal trading with Iran. Countries that still believe in multilater­alism should work together and push back against the unilateral­ism of the Trump administra­tion so that the internatio­nal norms of behavior remain intact and the US is not able to dictate who trades with whom depending on its own interests.

Meanwhile, the Iranian nuclear nonprolife­ration deal is at a crossroad, for if the EU and other economies yield to the coercion of the US it will spell the end of the deal. As long as Iran and the EU do not retrogress in their commitment to nuclear nonprolife­ration, there is still hope that the Iran nuclear deal will be able to survive without the US.

The deal is an important achievemen­t of multilater­alism, one that has proved effective since it was agreed. Safeguardi­ng the deal will not only be conducive to preventing the proliferat­ion of nuclear weapons and preventing further chaos in the Middle East, it will also continue to uphold it as an example that hot issues can be resolved through diplomacy.

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