Dayton Daily News

Trump renews Iran deal, but ...

European allies given just 120 days to agree to overhaul.

- Mark Landler ©2018 The New York Times

President WASHINGTON —

Donald Trump again stopped short of reimposing punitive sanctions on Iran that could break up its nuclear deal with world powers, the White House said Friday. But Trump gave European allies only 120 days to agree to an overhaul of the deal or administra­tion officials said he would pull the United States out of it.

He also approved sanctions against the head of Iran’s judiciary, Sadeq Larijani, a powerful figure whom the administra­tion holds culpable for the violent crackdown on recent anti-government protests.

Larijani is the most prominent of several Iranian officials and entities blackliste­d, a roster of 14 individual­s and entities that also includes the cyber unit of the Islamic Revolution­ary Guard Corps, which the United States said has repressed social media networks that protesters can use to share informatio­n.

Trump’s action, which was widely expected, is the third time he has given a reprieve to the agreement brokered by President Barack Obama, despite having labeled it “the worst deal ever” and threatenin­g repeatedly to rip it up.

His reluctance to preserve the agreement deepened in recent weeks after the protests, in which at least 21 people died and thousands were jailed. But the president’s senior aides again persuaded him not to dissolve it, while European leaders have said Iran was still abiding by its terms — and that breaching it would play into the hands of hard-liners in the country.

Trump, officials said, would not waive the santions again in May unless the Europeans agreed to a “follow-on” deal that eliminates the “sunset clauses” in the current agreement, under which Iran is allowed to resume activities like enriching uranium. It would also have to contain “triggers,” including inspection­s of Iranian facilities, which would lead to a reimpositi­on of sanctions if Iran failed to comply.

Iran did not immediatel­y react to the announceme­nt, though officials said they were prepared if Trump had decided to act. Iran’s first vice president, Eshagh Jahangiri, told the semioffici­al ISNA news agency, “If the Americans withdraw from the nuclear deal, we will not hold a mourning service; we are fully prepared for any likely event.”

White House officials played up the sanctions against Larijani as a symbol of Trump’s displeasur­e with the Islamic Republic’s government — and solidarity with those who are rallying against it. They predicted that the move would reverberat­e politicall­y inside Iran, since Larijani’s brother, Ali Larijani, is the head of Iran’s Parliament.

Republican­s in the Senate have drafted legislatio­n that would amend the deal by eliminatin­g its “sunset provisions.” But they have so far been unable to bridge gaps with the Democratic caucus.

There is also no evidence that the Europeans have the appetite to reopen the deal.

On Thursday, hours before Trump made his decision, European foreign ministers met in Brussels with Iran’s foreign minister, Mohammad Javad Zarif, ostensibly to press Tehran about its destabiliz­ing activities in the region, which are putting the nuclear deal at risk.

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