Imperial Valley Press

EU works to save unraveling nuclear agreement with Iran

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BRUSSELS (AP) — European Union nations threw their diplomatic weight behind the unraveling Iran nuclear deal on Monday, trying to rescue the pact from collapsing under U.S. pressure.

The 28 EU foreign ministers insisted that recent Iranian actions surpassing uranium enrichment thresholds set by the 2015 deal did not necessaril­y condemn the whole agreement.

“We note that technicall­y all the steps that have been taken — and that we regret have been taken — are reversible. So we hope and we invite Iran to reverse the steps,” said EU foreign policy chief Federica Mogherini.

“The deviations are not significan­t enough to think that Iran has definitive­ly broken the agreement,” said Spanish Foreign Minister Josep Borrell, who is in line to succeed Mogherini this fall.

The EU currently has few direct measures for offsetting U.S. economic sanctions against Tehran that have crippled the country’s economy, and the bloc faces U.S. threats to target any EU companies that attempt to trade with Iran.

Noting that Iran was “still a good year away” from potentiall­y developing a nuclear bomb, British Foreign Secretary Jeremy Hunt said there was still a “small window to keep the deal alive.”

Even if Britain, France, Germany and the rest of the EU held out a helping hand to Iran, the diplomatic puzzle was made more difficult Monday when France’s foreign ministry said a researcher with dual French-Iranian nationalit­y had been arrested in Iran.

It said the French government was seeking informatio­n about Fariba Adelkhah and consular access to her “without delay” but added there has been “no satisfacto­ry response to its demands as of today.”

Iranian opposition websites based abroad have said Abdelkhah disappeare­d in June.

And while the EU nations were looking to deescalate tensions in the Persian Gulf region, they also put the blame on the Trump administra­tion for quitting the deal last year, imposing sanctions and trying to keep European nations from trading with Iran.

French Foreign Minister Jean-Yves Le Drian said that Iran’s recent moves to surpass mutually agreed limits from the deal were only “a bad reaction following a bad decision — which was the U.S. decision to withdraw from the accord and put sanctions into place.”

China, another signatory to the global agreement, said that U.S. pressure was the root cause of recent developmen­ts and called on the Trump administra­tion to step in and fix the diplomatic quagmire.

Chinese foreign ministry spokesman Geng Shuang said it was “better for the one who made the trouble to fix it.”

Facing economic hardship, Iran had called on the other parties to the agreement — Germany, France, Britain, China, Russia and the EU — to come up with enough economic incentives to effectivel­y offset the U.S. sanctions.

 ??  ?? European Union foreign policy chief Federica Mogherini (left) talks to Spain’s Foreign Minister Josep Borrell during a European Foreign Affairs meeting at the European Council headquarte­rs in Brussels, on Monday. AP PhoTo/FrAncIsco seco
European Union foreign policy chief Federica Mogherini (left) talks to Spain’s Foreign Minister Josep Borrell during a European Foreign Affairs meeting at the European Council headquarte­rs in Brussels, on Monday. AP PhoTo/FrAncIsco seco

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