The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Major powers defend Iran agreement

Key US allies say Trump’s decision could harm nuclear deal; Israel, Saudi Arabia hail tough US stance

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WASHINGTON: Russia criticised US President Donald Trump’s threat to end the 2015 Iran nuclear deal and the European Union defended the pact as Israel and Saudi Arabia hailed Trump’s confrontat­ional stance toward Tehran.

In a widely expected speech, Trump said he would not certify Iran is complying with its agreement with six world powers and the European Union under which Tehran promised to rein in its nuclear programme in return for the easing of economic sanctions.

The Republican president, who has called the pact negotiated by his Democratic predecesso­r Barack Obama ‘an embarrassm­ent’ and the ‘worst deal ever,’ threw the issue to the US Congress, which has 60 days to decide whether to reinstate US sanctions. Trump warned that if “we are not able to reach a solution working with Congress and our allies, then the agreement will be terminated.”

His stance put him at odds with key US allies, including Britain, France and Germany who, along with Russia and China, were the major powers that negotiated the deal with Iran alongside the European Union.

In Brussels, EU foreign policy chief Federica Mogherini said Washington could not unilateral­ly cancel the agreement.

“We cannot afford as the internatio­nal community to dismantle a nuclear agreement that is working,” said Mogherini, who chaired the final stages of the landmark talks. “This deal is not a bilateral agreement.

“The internatio­nal community, and the European Union with it, has clearly indicated that the deal is, and will continue to be, in place,” Mogherini told reporters in Brussels.

The leaders of Britain, France and Germany issued a joint statement warning the United

We cannot afford as the internatio­nal community to dismantle a nuclear agreement that is working. This deal is not a bilateral agreement. — Federica Mogherini, EU foreign policy chief

States against taking decisions that could harm the nuclear deal such as re-imposing sanctions.

The three leaders also said they shared US concerns over Iran’s ballistic missile programme and regional destabilis­ing activities and were ready to work with Washington to address those concerns.

In contrast, Russia’s foreign ministry said there was no place in internatio­nal diplomacy for threatenin­g and aggressive rhetoric, and said such methods were doomed to fail in a statement issued after Trump’s speech.

The ministry said Trump’s decision to de-certify the deal would not have a direct impact on implementa­tion of the agreement but that it ran counter to its spirit. There was no immediate reaction from China, though Alexei Pushkov, a pro-Kremlin lawmaker in the upper house of the Russian parliament, said neither Moscow nor Beijing backed Trump’s stance.

“Russia of course does not support the US position, nor does China. So Trump will be left in proud isolation in an attempt to improve his image among his own supporters,” Pushkov told Russia’s state-run Rossiya-24 TV station. — Reuters

WASHINGTON: President Donald Trump dumped the fate of the Iran nuclear deal on US lawmakers Friday, leaving open the question of whether they can turn the screw on Tehran without killing the accord. Unveiling an aggressive new strategy against what he called the ‘rogue regime’ in Iran, Trump said he will not certify under US law that the 2015 pact remains in the US interests. He threatened that he could as president cancel the deal ‘at any time’ but, rather than doing so, he left it up to Congress to decide whether to levy new US sanctions on Iran that might capsize the agreement. Two influentia­l Republican senators have drawn up a plan for sanctions that European diplomats fear would amount to a repudiatio­n of the 2015 internatio­nal accord, but it is unclear whether they could muster a majority. There is broader support for fresh pressure on Iran over its continued missile developmen­t and subversive activities in the region — factors that Trump says violate the ‘spirit’ of the agreement. But can Democrats and Republican­s agree on measures that wou ld stop short of destroying an accord that was the product of many years of diplomacy and is fiercely defended by US allies in Europe and fellow members of the UN Security Council.

“I am directing my administra­tion to work closely with Congress and our allies to address the deal’s many serious flaws so that the Iranian regime can never threaten the world with nuclear weapons,” Trump said.

With Congress the next battlefiel­d over Iran policy, diplomats say they have observed US lawmaker reluctance at being seen as responsibl­e for walking away from the pact.

“Many senators are looking for a middle way,” said one Western diplomat. “They don’t want to kill the agreement.”

The 2015 Joint Comprehens­ive Plan of Action (JCPOA) curbed Iran’s nuclear programme in return for sanctions relief.

It was signed by Iran, Germany, and UN Security Council permanent members Britain, China, France, Russia and the US.

Trump could have scuppered the deal himself, by declining to waive the sanctions when they came up for review in September.

Instead, his decertific­ation move set the clock ticking on a 60-day period during which Congress can choose to re-impose the sanctions.

Tehran has warned such action would mean Washington had broken its end of the bargain, and thus likely signal the end of their own compliance.

US Secretary of State Rex Tillerson said the administra­tion is not urging Congress to impose new sanctions.

“Obviously, if they do that, that does then put the JCPOA agreement in question,” Tillerson said.

Congress could also ‘do nothing’, and allow the deal to stand as is, he added.

Republican­s, who are in the majority in Congress, have for years denounced the pact, which was brokered during Barack Obama’s administra­tion.

When the deal was struck, Congress passed the Iran Nuclear Agreement Review Act (INARA) that gave US lawmakers a say in managing the accord.

This includes a requiremen­t for the president to certify Iran’s compliance with the accord every 90 days, and an option to slap sanctions back on Iran with a simple majority vote.

Lawmakers are hesitant about reimposing the sanctions, including restrictio­ns on Iran’s vast oil sector, that had severely hobbled the country’s economy, but senior Republican­s appeared keen to tighten the screws in other ways.

After Trump’s announceme­nt, House Foreign Affairs Committee chairman Ed Royce said that “in the coming weeks” the House will vote to boost non-nuclear sanctions.

Senate Foreign Relations Committee Chairman Bob Corker said it ‘might feel good for a second’ to shred the deal, but he stressed the need to keep allies on the same page.

One option unveiled Friday by Corker and Iran hawk Senator Tom Cotton is an amendment to INARA that would toughen Iran’s compliance requiremen­ts and address ‘deficienci­es’ in the deal.

The proposal would target the pact’s ‘sunset’ provisions that would gradually allow Iran to advance its uranium enrichment programme from 2025.

According to a summary, the US would reimpose its pre-deal sanctions on Iran if it did restart enrichment, even if this was allowed under the JCPOA.

“I think that we have provided a route to overcome deficienci­es and to keep the administra­tion in the deal, and actually make it the kind of deal it should have been in the first place,” Corker said.

Diplomats have expressed worry that tweaking INARA could jeopardise the agreement, and warned that the US unilateral­ly abolishing the ‘sunset’ would make it harder to negotiate with allies that back the existing agreement.

It remained to be seen whether there was enough support in Congress for the amendment, which would require a bipartisan majority in the Senate. — AFP

 ??  ?? Trump speaks about Iran and the Iran nuclear deal in the White House. — Reuters photo
Trump speaks about Iran and the Iran nuclear deal in the White House. — Reuters photo

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