There will be no new deal, pledges Tehran
IRAN will not renegotiate its nuclear agreement with world powers, even if it faces new US sanctions after Donald Trump becomes president, deputy foreign minister Abbas Araqchi said yesterday.
Trump, who will take office on Friday, has threatened to either scrap the agreement, which curbs Iran’s nuclear programme and lifts sanctions against it, or seek a better deal.
No renegotiation
“There will be no renegotiation and the (agreement) will not be reopened,” said Araqchi, Iran’s top nuclear negotiator at the talks that led to the agreement in 2015. We and many analysts believe that the (agreement) is consolidated.
“The new US administration will not be able to abandon it,” Araqchi told a news conference in Tehran, held a year after the deal took effect. “Nuclear talks with America are over and we have nothing else to discuss,” he added.
“It’s quite likely that the US Congress or the next administration will act against Iran and impose new sanctions.”
‘It’s quite likely that the US Congress or the next administration will act against Iran’.
Under Iran’s agreement with the US, France, Germany, Britain, Russia and China, most UN sanctions were lifted a year ago. But Iran is still subject to a UN arms embargo and other restrictions, which are not technically part of the nuclear agreement.
Meanwhile, the deal between Iran and key world powers to curb Tehran’s nuclear programme is working and Trump would be wise to preserve it, outgoing US ambassador to the UN, Samantha Power, said on Friday.
Trump, who will take office on Friday, has threatened to either scrap the nuclear agreement or seek a better deal.
“We who see the threat that Iran poses, through its destabilising actions in the region and through its support for terrorism, would be very wise to preserve an agreement that denies it a weapon of mass destruction,” Power said.