Hindustan Times (Patiala)

The US has no alternativ­e to the Iran nuclear deal

Washington seems to have no evidence that Tehran is violating the agreement

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The US-Iran nuclear deal lives to fight another day. The Internatio­nal Atomic Energy Agency last week once again certified Iran was in compliance with the nuclear agreement that Tehran signed with six other countries. The IAEA’s continued green light is important because it denies legitimacy to United States President Donald Trump’s hostility to the Iran nuclear deal.

The importance of the Iran nuclear deal cannot be stressed enough. While it allows Iran the right to enrich uranium, it keeps the weaponisat­ion of its nuclear capability on hold for a decade in return for a lifting of internatio­nal economic sanctions. Without the agreement, Tehran would be free to pursue nuclear weapons and the internatio­nal community would face two bad options. One would be to accept Iran as a de facto nuclear weapons state with the likelihood this would trigger a nuclear scramble among other regional powers including Saudi Arabia. The other would be to carry out military strikes against Iran’s nuclear facilities, with the hugely disruptive consequenc­es that would follow – including a wider regional war and a superspike in global oil prices.

The Trump administra­tion may feel Iran has been given too free a rein given its record of violating its internatio­nal treaty obligation­s on nuclear issues. But it has provided no real alternativ­e to the present Iran nuclear deal. It has also provided no evidence Tehran is in violation of the deal, even though the US refusal to follow other countries and lift sanctions against Iran is violative of the spirit of the agreement. Fortunatel­y, the US seems to accept the weakness of its case: Trump has twice certified that Iran is in compliance to the US Congress. But the US president’s attitude and the potential for disagreeme­nt on Iran’s military sites is a reminder that stability in the Persian Gulf has weak roots.

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