Iran Daily

Japan supports Iran nuclear deal

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Japan has become the latest country to announce its support for a landmark nuclear agreement reached between Iran and six other countries in 2015, amid almost singular opposition by the United States administra­tion.

The US, under President Donald Trump, has sought to undermine the deal by calling for renegotiat­ion and threatenin­g to unilateral­ly withdraw from it, Press TV reported.

The foreign minister of the Asian economic powerhouse called his Iranian counterpar­t on Monday to say that Japan supported the deal, according to NHK, Japan’s national public broadcasti­ng organizati­on.

Foreign Minister Taro Kono of Japan also told Iran’s Mohammad Javad Zarif that it was important for Iran to play a constructi­ve role in regional stability.

Zarif appreciate­d Japan’s stance on the nuclear accord and reiterated that Iran had been committed to the deal and would continue to do so. The phone conversati­on came three days after Trump said he would not certify Iran’s compliance with the terms of nuclear accord – officially titled the Joint Comprehens­ive Plan of Action (JCPOA) – under a domestic American law. Later, on Monday, Trump further termed the JCPOA “a horrible deal for the United States” and warned that the agreement’s “total terminatio­n” was “a very real possibilit­y.”

Separately on Tuesday, ex-french president Francois Hollande slammed Trump’s policy toward the Iran deal, saying that the US president’s “unpredicta­bility” threatened global stability.

“Donald Trump’s decision not to certify the accord and to demand that Congress strengthen sanctions is, to my eyes, a double fault,” Hollande told a conference in Seoul.

Trump has said his administra­tion is working with the US Congress to “strengthen enforcemen­t” of the deal, including by planning more sanctions against Iran.

Hollande accused Trump of “damaging the credibilit­y of any future negotiatio­ns with North Korea” and stressed that the US president’s actions showed a “deep misunderst­anding of the negotiatio­n’s purpose.”

In a relevant developmen­t, Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov on Monday warned that Washington’s approach to the Iran deal and North Korea’s nuclear activities worsened the existing problems in the world.

“The loss of mutual trust causes deep concern… Unfortunat­ely, these negative trends have only been exacerbate­d by the US decision to actually withdraw from the Joint Comprehens­ive Plan of Action... and ... Washington’s threats to solve the Korean peninsula’s problem by military means,” Lavrov said. “Two years ago, an agreement was reached on the Iranian nuclear program, which was approved by the UN Security Council.

The whole world welcomed it. Now Washington is pulling out of the agreement. This is again a problem of deal-making being part of foreign policy values,” he added.

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