Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Nuke deal ‘too precious’ to risk, Iranian says

- NICOLE WINFIELD

ROME — The head of Iran’s nuclear agency warned the United States on Tuesday against underminin­g the 2015 nuclear deal, saying that internatio­nal nonprolife­ration efforts as well as Washington’s internatio­nal standing would suffer as a result.

Iranian nuclear chief Ali Akbar Salehi told an internatio­nal conference on enhancing nuclear safety that Washington’s recent “delusionar­y negative postures do not augur well” for keeping the deal intact.

He said Iran didn’t want to see the deal unravel but that “much more is at stake for the entire internatio­nal community than the national interests of Iran.”

U.S. President Donald Trump is set to deliver a speech on Iran this week in which he is expected to decline to certify Iran’s compliance in the landmark 2015 agreement, which would force Congress to take up the measure and perhaps target the country’s paramilita­ry Revolution­ary Guard with new sanctions.

Salehi praised the progress that had been made since the 2015 deal, saying nonprolife­ration and disarmamen­t efforts had benefited worldwide. He called it “simply too precious to be allowed to be undermined or weakened.”

“The failure of the nuclear deal will undermine the political credibilit­y and internatio­nal stature of the U.S. in this tumultuous political environmen­t,” Salehi warned.

He concluded that he hoped “common sense shall prevail.”

The U.S. administra­tion has faced two 90-day certificat­ion deadlines to state whether Iran is meeting the conditions needed to continue enjoying sanctions relief under the deal, and both times it has backed away from a showdown. But Trump more recently has said he does not expect to certify Iran’s compliance with the October deadline looming.

On Monday, the European Union’s foreign policy chief, Federica Mogherini, praised the 2015 deal as a “win-win” solution that was working.

“We settled a milestone for nonprolife­ration and we prevented a dangerous devastatin­g military escalation,” she told the conference via video message, adding that the Internatio­nal Atomic Energy Agency had certified Iran’s compliance with the deal, including through inspection­s, eight times since it was signed.

She warned that with rising nuclear tensions on the Korean Peninsula, “We have an interest and a responsibi­lity and a duty to preserve the nuclear deal with Iran” and strengthen, not weaken, the nonprolife­ration regime.

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