The Press

Powers puts US on sideline

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Iran

Top diplomats from world powers will meet tomorrow in a bid to defend their nuclear deal with Iran from attack by President Donald Trump.

Foreign ministers from China, France, Germany, Russia and the United Kingdom will convene in Vienna for the first time without the US in order ‘‘to ensure the continued implementa­tion’’ of the agreement, which granted Iran a reprieve from sanctions in exchange for limits to its nuclear program, according to a European Union statement yesterday. Trump abandoned the deal in May and re-imposed sanctions against countries and companies that do business with Iran. ‘‘Austria and the European Union are ready to maintain and deepen the framework for cooperatio­n with Iran,’’ Austrian President Alexander Van der Bellen said after a meeting in the Austrian capital with his Iranian counterpar­t, Hassan Rouhani. US threats to impose secondary sanctions violate the rights of European companies and individual­s, Van der Bellen said.

Iran, a major oil exporter that also has the world’s secondbigg­est natural gas reserves, has demanded that EU countries come up with concrete economic steps to defend nuclear deal. The July 2015 agreement was plunged into crisis by Trump’s decision, even as internatio­nal inspectors continued to verify that Rouhani’s government was living up to its side of the bargain. The US accuses Iran of violating the agreement’s spirit through destabilis­ing activities the Middle East.

Rouhani said yesterday that Iran will not leave the agreement as long as it is profitable to his country The Iranian leader was on the second leg of a two-day tour of Austria and Switzerlan­d, the two neutral countries in the heart of Europe where the nuclear deal was negotiated.

A US State Department official warned on Wednesday in Washington that any plans to continue doing business with Iran will run afoul of US sanctions.

‘‘Our goal is to increase pressure on the Iranian regime by reducing to zero its revenue from crude oil sales,’’ said Brian Hook, who has led Trump administra­tion discussion­s with European allies on the sanctions. ‘‘We are prepared to work with countries that are reducing their imports on a case-by-case basis, but as with our other sanctions we are not looking to grant waivers or licenses.’’ Much of Iran’s oil revenue and banking ties will be at stake if neither can be protected by the EU. Rouhani, who faces intense pressure from hardline conservati­ves at home who accuse him of being naive for trusting the US, would be left with little incentive to remain in the deal and in compliance with its terms and conditions.

EU states have been skeptical of proposals to allow European finance to bypass American sanctions.

‘‘Austria and the European Union are ready to maintain and deepen the framework for cooperatio­n with Iran.’’ Alexander Van der Bellen, Austrian President

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