Oman Daily Observer

Three Iran nuclear sites exempted from sanctions

UNWISE MOVE: Foreign Minister Zarif takes to Youtube against ‘absurd, unlawful and fundamenta­lly flawed’ US action

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WASHINGTON, DC: The US has exempted three Iranian nuclear sites from sanctions, but warned that they will be under strict scrutiny, the State Department said.

The benefitted sites were those of Arak (central Iran), Bushehr (south) and Fordow, near the city of Qom that was built undergroun­d to protect against military attack.

The measure announced was “interim” and only allowed the continuati­on of the three nonprolife­ration projects “under the strictest scrutiny to ensure transparen­cy and maintain constraint­s on Iran” Efe quoted the State Department as saying.

On Monday, the US imposed its “toughest ever” sanctions on Iran that it had earlier lifted after the signing of the nuclear agreement in July, 2015 between Tehran and Russia, China, the UK, France, Germany and the US.

US President Donald Trump’s administra­tion in May reinstated all sanctions lifted under the 2015 nuclear deal, targeting both Iran and countries that trade with it in oil, financial transactio­ns with its Central Bank and the country’s port sector.

Iran’s Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif took to Youtube on Tuesday to dismiss US sanctions and Washington’s demands of change from Tehran as “absurd, unlawful and fundamenta­lly flawed”.

“The US administra­tion appears to believe that imposing draconian sanctions on Iran will bring about such pain to our nation that it will force us to submit to its will,” Zarif said in a video message, posted in English and Persian.

“We have weathered difficult times in the face of 40 years of American hostility relying solely on our own resources, and today we and our partners across the globe will ensure that our people are least affected by this indiscrimi­nate assault,” he said.

Washington’s decision to scrap the multi-nation nuclear deal with Iran and reimpose sanctions — with the last tranche hitting — was “pushing it further into global isolation”.

The Persian version said the US “will regret this unwise move” and emphasised that the sanctions were aimed at “separating people from each other and from the establishm­ent”.

The United States would be better off rethinking its “unconditio­nal support” for Israel, which has “blinded the US to their appalling atrocities”, Zarif said.

“President (Donald) Trump’s predecesso­rs also began crafting their Iran policy with similar bravado but came around to accepting and respecting the reality of Iran as they became more experience­d in office,” he added. ERDOGAN HITS OUT AT

SANCTIONS Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan too on Tuesday hit out at new sanctions on Iran imposed by the administra­tion of US President Donald Trump, saying they were aimed at upsetting the global balance and against internatio­nal law.

Turkey was one of eight countries exempted from the demand to stop buying Iranian oil. “We don’t find the (Iran) sanctions appropriat­e,” Erdogan was quoted as saying by the state-run Anadolu news agency.

“Because to us, they are aimed at upsetting the global balance,” he added. “They are against internatio­nal law and diplomacy. We don’t want to live in an imperial world.”

Erdogan’s comments came after his Foreign Minister Mevlut Cavusoglu warned that isolating Iran was “dangerous.”

“While we were asking (for) an exemption from the United States, we have also been very frank with them that cornering Iran is not wise. Isolating Iran is dangerous and punishing the Iranian people is not fair,” he told a press conference during a trip to Japan.

“Turkey is against sanctions, we don’t believe any results can be achieved through the sanctions,” he added. “I think instead of sanctions, meaningful dialogue and engagement is much more useful.”

We have weathered difficult times in the face of 40 years of American hostility relying solely on our own resources MOHAMMAD ZARIF Iran’s Foreign Minister

 ??  ?? Iranian tourists exchange Iranian rial banknotes in the central Iraqi shrine city of Najaf on Tuesday. — AFP
Iranian tourists exchange Iranian rial banknotes in the central Iraqi shrine city of Najaf on Tuesday. — AFP

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