Oman Daily Observer

Iran will stay in N-deal only if it serves interests, syas Rouhani

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ANKARA: Iran harshly reacted to President Donald Trump’s decision not to certify its nuclear deal with six major powers, and President Hassan Rouhani said Tehran might walk away if the continuing agreement does not serve the country’s national interests.

Defying Trump, Rouhani said Tehran will double its efforts to expand the country’s defence capabiliti­es, including the country’s ballistic missile programme despite the US pressure to suspend it.

Trump said in an address at the White House that he would not continue to certify the multinatio­nal agreement and warned he might ultimately terminate it.

“No president can revoke an internatio­nal deal... Iran will continue to respect it as long as it serves our interests,” Rouhani said in a live television address, adding that Trump’s speech was full of “insults and fake accusation­s” against Iranians. While Trump did not pull the United States out of the agreement, aimed at preventing Iran from developing a nuclear bomb, he gave the US Congress 60 days to decide whether to reimpose economic sanctions on Tehran that were lifted under the pact.

That increases tension with Iran as well as putting Washington at odds with other signatorie­s of the accord such as Britain, France, Germany, Russia, China and the European Union, who say the US cannot unilateral­ly cancel the 2015 nuclear deal between Iran and world powers.

“The Iranian nation has not and will never bow to any foreign pressure... Iran’s deal cannot be renegotiat­ed,” Rouhani said.

Trump announced the major shift in US policy in a speech in which he detailed a more confrontat­ional approach to Iran over its nuclear and ballistic missile programmes.

Rouhani backed Iran’s elite Islamic Revolution­ary Guards Corps (IRGC), saying the IRGC will continue its fight against “regional terrorists.”

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