The Borneo Post

Europe urges US Congress not to torpedo Iran deal

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WASHINGTON: EU foreign policy chief Federica Mogherini warned Tuesday that the Iran nuclear deal can never be renegotiat­ed, as she urged US lawmakers not to try to reopen the agreement.

Her visit coincided with that of the head of the UN nuclear watchdog, IAEA director-general Yukiya Amano, who defended his agency’s ability to monitor Iran’s compliance with the accord.

President Donald Trump has told Congress that he can no longer ‘certify’ that the 2015 accord is in the US national interest, leaving its fate in the hands of skeptical senators.

Mogherini, therefore, came to Washington — while Trump and her opposite number Secretary of State Rex Tillerson were touring Asia – to sit down with legislator­s on Capitol Hill.

While she insisted Brussels does not want to interfere in Washington politics, she sent a clear message that Europe opposes any new US law that would breach the terms of the deal.

Senator Bob Corker, the head of the powerful Senate foreign relations committee, and his Republican colleague and rising star Senator Tom Cotton, are working on such a bill.

While it has not been finalised — and its supporters insist it is designed to strengthen enforcemen­t of the Iran deal rather than to destroy it – opponents fear it will do just that.

Speaking to reporters after talks with US lawmakers, Mogherini said she had sought and received reassuranc­es that the bill would keep the United States ‘compliant with the deal.’

“We are exchanging views with legislator­s on the need to make sure, before a bill is presented, that its contents does not represent a violation,” she said.

In a fact sheet to explain the proposed law, the senators propose that US nuclear-related sanctions on Iran would snap back if Tehran violates “enhanced and existing

We are exchanging views with legislator­s on the need to make sure, before a bill is presented, that its contents does not represent a violation.

restrictio­ns.”

These “enhancemen­ts” to restrictio­ns would end so called ‘sunset’ clauses that would see some curbs on Tehran’s program phased out between eight and 15 years from now.

But supporters of the deal argue changing these provisions of the Joint Comprehens­ive Plan of Action (JCPOA) signed by Iran and six world powers would itself collapse the deal.

Mogherini pushed back strongly on the idea that the 2015 deal, under which Iran submitted to nuclear controls in return for sanctions relief, would “sunset” at all.

“The JCPOA has no sunset clause,” she said.

“There are different arrangemen­ts within the JCPOA that have different durations... some will last forever.

“Article Three of the agreement says that Iran will never develop a nuclear weapon, for instance.”

And, she added, under the “foreseen ratificati­on” by Iran of the Internatio­nal Atomic Energy Agency’s “additional protocol ... certain commitment­s will become permanent.”

“Renegotiat­ing is not an option,” she said, insisting Britain, France, Germany, China and Russia will not review 12 years of complex internatio­nal diplomacy because of US concerns.

Separately, IAEA chief Amano denied claims by opponents of the Iran deal that his agency is not able to monitor Iran’s compliance with JCPOA and is blocked from military sites.

“I cannot discuss the details of our access, but what I can say is that we have had access to all the locations that we needed to visit and this should continue,” he said.

He said the issue of access had been ‘exaggerate and whether or not a site was military or civilian run was not important.

“It is not that relevant,” he said. “The places that interest us are the places that have nuclear material, nuclear expertise and nuclearrel­ated equipment.”

Amano visited Iran last week and met with President Hassan Rouhani, vice-president and atomic energy chief Ali Akbar Salehi and Foreign Minister Javad Zarif.

All had assured him, he said, that Iran would not be the first to pull out of the JCPOA.

This would include Iran’s eventual ratificati­on of the IAEA ‘additional protocol’, but Amano said that inspection­s were already taking place under its ‘provisiona­l’ applicatio­n. — AFP

Federica Mogherini, EU foreign policy chief

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 ??  ?? Mogherini (centre) walks through the US Capitol between meetings in Washington, DC. — AFP photo
Mogherini (centre) walks through the US Capitol between meetings in Washington, DC. — AFP photo

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