Los Angeles Times

Nuclear program could be restarted in hours, Iran says

President’s warning to Trump comes in response to ballistic missile sanctions.

- By Ramin Mostaghim and Shashank Bengali shashank.bengali @latimes.com Twitter: @SBengali Special correspond­ent Mostaghim reported from Tehran and Times staff writer Bengali from Mumbai, India.

— Iran’s president on Tuesday warned his nation could restart its nuclear program “within hours or days” if the Trump administra­tion continued its confrontat­ional policies toward the Islamic Republic.

President Hassan Rouhani’s remarks were a direct response to President Trump’s decision to slap fresh sanctions on individual­s and businesses connected to Iran’s ballistic mis- sile program.

Trump has also pledged to undo the 2015 agreement that Iran signed with the United States, five other world powers and the EU, under which Tehran suspended its nuclear program in exchange for an easing of internatio­nal sanctions.

Rouhani told lawmakers in Iran that “sanctions and bullying” by Trump administra­tion officials were the type of “failed policies that forced their predecesso­rs to the negotiatin­g table” to reach the landmark nuclear deal, one of the Obama administra­tion’s signature foreign policy achievemen­ts.

The Iranian leader said the country could quickly resume its nuclear activities and increase uranium en- richment — a precursor to building a nuclear bomb — to levels higher than before the agreement.

“If they want to return to the previous position, definitely, not within a week or a month, but within hours or days, we will be back to a much more advanced stage than we were during our last negotiatio­ns,” the staterun Islamic Republic News Agency quoted Rouhani as saying.

Rouhani has staked his presidency on the nuclear deal, and his threats to break its terms were a sign of how rapidly the war of words between the U.S. and Iran has escalated since Trump took office.

It was unclear whether Rouhani’s comments were bluster or if Iran could indeed restart its nuclear activities quickly. United Nations inspectors have access to Iran’s nuclear facilities under the agreement and have said the Islamic Republic is complying with its terms.

But last week, the head of Iran’s atomic energy agency and an architect of the 2015 agreement, Ali Akbar Salehi, suggested that Iran could return to 20% uranium enrichment levels “in four or five days ... to catch [the U.S.] by surprise.”

 ?? Abedin Taherkenar­eh European Pressphoto Agency ?? PRESIDENT Hassan Rouhani, in white turban, told lawmakers that Iran will not tolerate the Trump administra­tion’s confrontat­ional policies. His threats to break the nuclear deal underscore deteriorat­ing relations.
Abedin Taherkenar­eh European Pressphoto Agency PRESIDENT Hassan Rouhani, in white turban, told lawmakers that Iran will not tolerate the Trump administra­tion’s confrontat­ional policies. His threats to break the nuclear deal underscore deteriorat­ing relations.

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