Orlando Sentinel

Trump keeps Iran deal but adds unrelated sanctions

- By Tracy Wilkinson tracy.wilkinson@latimes.com

WASHINGTON — President Donald Trump agreed Friday to extend sanctions waivers on Iran to keep the landmark nuclear disarmamen­t deal intact, but vowed to quickly withdraw from what he called “the disastrous­ly flawed” accord unless it is significan­tly revised.

“No one should doubt my word,” Trump said in a harshly worded, two-page statement that also announced separate economic sanctions on 14 Iranian entities and individual­s.

Trump said he had reluctantl­y agreed to extend the waivers only in order to secure the support of America’s European allies to fix the agreement.

“This is a last chance,” he warned, declaring he would not do so again.

He did not set a deadline, but under U.S. law the president is required to waive sanctions every four months.

Unilateral­ly reimposing the sanctions would put the United States in violation of an internatio­nal agreement that was unanimousl­y approved by the United Nations Security Council in 2015.

Iranian officials have stressed they will not reopen negotiatio­ns on the accord, which required Tehran to dismantle or destroy most of its nuclear infrastruc­ture in exchange for easing of most internatio­nal sanctions.

The U.N. nuclear watchdog agency has repeatedly found Iran is complying with those obligation­s.

Senior administra­tion officials said the White House intends to negotiate with European allies a menu of “triggers” to reimpose multilater­al sanctions if Iran oversteps those lines.

But the officials also want the triggers to include Iran’s growing ballistic missile program, which was not part of the nuclear deal, and to remove sunset clauses that allow some nuclear restrictio­ns to ease or phase out over time.

“The idea is they (should) never expire,” a senior administra­tion official, speaking anonymousl­y, said of the restrictio­ns in briefing reporters ahead of the announceme­nt. “Iran should be denied all paths to a nuclear weapon … forever.”

The 14 Iranian individual­s and entities sanctioned Friday include a notorious prison and members of the Islamic Republic’s judiciary who have sentenced dissidents to death.

Also blackliste­d were Iran’s cyberspace agency, which administra­tion officials said restricts its citizens’ access to the internet; Iranian defense industry firms that repair and maintain helicopter­s and aircraft; a Malaysia-based company that allegedly supports Iranian naval missile production; and a Chinese businessma­n who allegedly supplied financing and equipment to Iran’s electronic­s industry.

The head of Iran’s judiciary, Sadegh Amoli Larijani, was put on the U.S. blacklist. He is the brother of the speaker of the Iranian parliament, Ali Larijani, the officials said.

“These designatio­ns politicall­y will go to the top of the regime,” said another administra­tion official, also speaking anonymousl­y, “and send the message that the United States will not tolerate the violation of the rights of (Iranian) citizens.”

The administra­tion long has argued that all of Iran’s “malicious behavior,” including its human rights abuses and support for militant groups across the Middle East, should be included in an internatio­nal regimen of punishment.

The nuclear deal was negotiated with Iran by the five permanent members of the U.N. Security Council and Germany. All sides agreed that it would cover only Iran’s apparent efforts to develop nuclear weapons, which was in violation of U.N. resolution­s, and not other issues.

The consequenc­es would have been far-reaching if Trump had decided not to continue waiving nuclear-related sanctions.

It would defy other members of the Security Council as well as most U.S. allies.

It also could hand Iran a pretext to start limiting U.N. inspection­s or restart its nuclear program.

 ?? JOHN THYS/GETTY-AFP ?? Iranian Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif Khonsari, center, attends a meeting Thursday at EU headquarte­rs. Support for the Iran nuclear deal is strong in Europe.
JOHN THYS/GETTY-AFP Iranian Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif Khonsari, center, attends a meeting Thursday at EU headquarte­rs. Support for the Iran nuclear deal is strong in Europe.

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