Cape Times

Attempt to save Iran nuke deal

Western envoys scramble to sway Trump’s hand as Tehran pours scorn on US leader

- BEIRUT/BRUSSELS

WESTERN envoys said Britain, Germany and France were nearing a package to put to Donald Trump to try to persuade him to save the Iran nuclear agreement, even as Tehran poured more scorn on the US president, dismissing him as a “tradesman”.

Trump has described the 2015 agreement, under which Iran promised to curb its nuclear activities in exchange for lifted sanctions, as the worst deal ever negotiated and has threatened to wreck it by reimposing US penalties next month.

Russia, China, Germany, Britain and France all signed the accord with Iran and the US and are determined to save the deal, seeing it as the best way to stop Iran developing a nuclear bomb.

Western envoys said yesterday that three months of meetings behind closed doors were culminatin­g in a package of separate measures that could be taken against Iran in the hope they would satisfy Trump while keeping the nuclear deal intact.

“This is about convincing President Trump. It’s not a new deal with Iran,” a senior EU diplomat said.

Unlike Trump, who again condemned the agreement on Tuesday, Britain, France and Germany do not want to renegotiat­e the complex nuclear accord.

Instead they are trying to draw up separate measures agreed between Europe and the US which aim to address areas not dealt with by the nuclear accord, mainly on Tehran’s support for Syrian President Bashar al-Assad and to contain Iran’s ballistic missiles programme.

That could include new EU sanctions on Iran, according to diplomats.

The new measures could also include ways to increase the time it would take Iran to develop a nuclear weapon in the future, although that aspect of the negotiatio­ns is proving the most difficult, the diplomats said.

Two European diplomats said the plan was broadly in line with stronger measures to contain Iran that French President Emmanuel Macron discussed with Trump during a visit to the White House on Tuesday.

Iranian President Hassan Rouhani earlier told a live TV audience that foreign powers had no authority to tinker with the nuclear deal, and questioned the American president’s qualificat­ions to question such a complex internatio­nal agreement.

“They say that with the certain leader of a European country we want to make a decision about a seven-sided agreement,” Rouhani said in a speech broadcast live on state TV.

“For what? With what right?” the Iranian leader added.

He reserved particular scorn for the US president, who delivered an ultimatum to the European powers on January 12, saying they must agree to “fix the terrible flaws of the Iran nuclear deal”, or he would refuse to extend the US sanctions relief on Iran that it calls for.

US sanctions will resume unless Trump issued fresh “waivers” to suspend them on May 12.

“You don’t have any background in politics. You don’t have any background in law,” Rouhani said, addressing Trump.

You don’t have any background on internatio­nal treaties,” he added.

“How can a tradesman, a merchant, a building constructo­r, a tower constructo­r make judgments about internatio­nal affairs,” he blasted, referring to Trump’s careeras a property developer.

Despite some resistance in Italy because of a series of billion dollar business deals with Iran, most European government­s are behind the new diplomatic effort to persuade Trump, although they caution that they do not know if he will back it.

“We will continue to discuss the issue with the UK and France, but also with the US,” Germany’s Foreign Minister Heiko Maas said while in Brussels, where he was attending a Syria donor conference.

“The Vienna nuclear agreement is very important and we want to uphold it.

“We want to help along a situation where the US stays in the agreement beyond May 12,” he said, referring to the Austrian capital where the accord was signed in 2015.

Rouhani said that he had only heard details about the European-US proposals from media reports but that he had discussed the issue with Macron in the past.

“I have personally spoken with Mr Macron a few times by telephone and one time extensivel­y in person,” Rouhani said.

“I told him frankly that not a single sentence will be added or subtracted from the nuclear deal. The deal is the deal.”

German Chancellor Angela Merkel will hold talks with Trump in Washington later in the week.

Senior Iranian officials have said repeatedly that Iran’s ballistic missile programme wasn’t up for negotiatio­n.

According to a confidenti­al document seen by Reuters, Britain, France and Germany were concerned that Iranian missiles were being used in wars in Yemen and Syria, where Iran was directly involved in the fighting.

 ??  ?? US President Donald Trump speaks at the Oval Office of the White House in Washington. Western envoys have prepared a package of measures that could be taken against Iran in the hope of convincing Trump to keep the nuclear deal intact.
US President Donald Trump speaks at the Oval Office of the White House in Washington. Western envoys have prepared a package of measures that could be taken against Iran in the hope of convincing Trump to keep the nuclear deal intact.

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