Scottish Daily Mail

Are you sure I’ve not seen you before?

Fury of Iran leader as US dumps nuclear deal

- By Jack Doyle Executive Political Editor

PERHAPS it’s the oddly-styled wild blond hair and portly figure – or maybe it’s the signature thumbs-up pose and colour of his tie.

Boris Johnson has been likened to a ‘Donald Trump impersonat­or’ after posting a picture of himself with the President’s daughter Ivanka.

The Foreign Secretary shared the image on his Twitter page after visiting Washington, causing many to do a double-take. They were quick to point out his resemblanc­e to the US President. One wrote: ‘I’m not joking – I thought this was a Donald Trump impersonat­or.’ Another added: ‘Has anyone ever seen them in the same room? #Doppelgang­er.’

year, and hailed the PM’s ‘remarkable leadership’ against modern slavery.

She told a fringe meeting: ‘We can’t stand by in silence. We join you today in a full-throated call for enhanced internatio­nal co-operation to tackle modern slavery in all its evil forms.

‘The Trump administra­tion will continue to make this a priority and work with your government­s to identify and implement solutions to end these crimes once and for all.’

IRAN launched a furious attack on Donald Trump yesterday after the US President tore up an internatio­nal deal designed to limit Tehran’s nuclear ambitions.

Politician­s burned the US flag and a copy of the agreement as supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei declared that Mr Trump’s body ‘will turn to ashes’ and be ‘food for worms’.

He also warned that he didn’t ‘trust’ the other signatorie­s to the agreement, including the UK, but appeared to leave the door open to it continuing.

Mr Trump pulled the plug on the 2015 agreement on Tuesday, describing it as ‘the worst deal ever’. He called the Joint Comprehens­ive Plan of Action (JCPOA) ‘disastrous’ and ‘one-sided’.

The decision was greeted with dismay by European leaders, who have lobbied the President to keep the accord which reduces economic sanctions in return for a freeze in the developmen­t of nuclear material.

Last night the White House said that Mr Trump is preparing to impose additional sanctions on Iran, perhaps as early as next week.

A spokesman said: ‘We are 100 per cent committed to making sure that Iran does not have nuclear weapons.

‘We’re going to continue to put maximum pressure, enormous sanctions on them.

‘All of the sanctions that were in place before the deal are back in place and we are preparing to add additional sanctions that may come as early as next week.’

It came as Boris Johnson declared Britain has ‘no intention of walking away’ from the deal – and urged Mr Trump to come up with a replacemen­t plan. The Foreign Secretary said he would work with the EU and other signatorie­s to the agreement to try and make it work and would not follow the US in imposing sanctions. However, British firms who continue to trade with Iran could find themselves facing legal consequenc­es in the US.

Addressing the Commons, Mr Johnson said yesterday: ‘For as long as Iran abides by the agreement ... then Britain will remain a party to the JCPOA. Britain has no intention of walking away.

‘Instead we will co-operate with the other parties to ensure that while Iran continues to restrict its nuclear programme, then its people will benefit from sanctions relief in accordance with the central bargain of the deal.’

He added: ‘Now that our efforts on this side of the Atlantic have not succeeded, it falls to the US administra­tion to spell out their view of the way ahead. In the

‘Death to America’

meantime, I urge the US to avoid taking any action that would hinder other parties from continuing to make the agreement work in the interests of our collective national security.’

He downplayed the prospect of a military response from the US. ‘If it has military options, frankly I have yet to see them,’ he said.

However, Mr Trump yesterday warned Iran against resuming its nuclear weapons programme, telling them doing so would result in ‘severe consequenc­e’.

Most US sanctions will start to come into force in 90 days, and six months for those related to energy. This could hit British companies – who were urged by officials to seek legal advice.

Iran’s president, Hassan Rouhani, has warned that it could restart uranium enrichment ‘without any limitation­s’ within weeks.

Ayatollah Khamenei, who holds ultimate power in the theocratic regime, said Tehran would quit the deal unless European signatorie­s offered solid guarantees that trade relations would continue.

He said: ‘The body of this man, Trump, will turn to ashes and become the food of the worms and ants while the Islamic Republic continues to stand.’

He told the crowd that Iranian officials ‘want to continue the nuclear deal’ with Britain, France and Germany, but added: ‘I do not trust these countries either.’

‘If you cannot get a strong guarantee from them, and I see it very unlikely that you can, we could not move and continue like this any more.’

In Tehran, demonstrat­ors – including politician­s – shouted ‘death to America’ and burned the Stars and Stripes.

 ??  ?? Fiery rhetoric: Agitated members of the Iranian parliament in Tehran burn the US flag yesterday, hours after Donald Trump scrapped the nuclear deal
Fiery rhetoric: Agitated members of the Iranian parliament in Tehran burn the US flag yesterday, hours after Donald Trump scrapped the nuclear deal

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