San Francisco Chronicle

Nuclear enrichment has ‘no limit,’ president says

- By Nasser Karimi and Joseph Krauss Nasser Karimi and Joseph Krauss are Associated Press writers.

TEHRAN — Iran’s president said Thursday that there is “no limit” to the country’s enrichment of uranium following its decision to abandon its commitment­s under the 2015 nuclear deal in response to the killing of its top general in a U.S. air strike.

In a speech before the heads of banks, President Hassan Rouhani said the nuclear program is in a “better situation” than it was before the nuclear agreement with world powers.

President Trump withdrew from the nuclear agreement in May 2018, in part because it did not address Iran’s support for armed groups across the region and its ballistic missile program. The U.S. has since imposed “maximum” sanctions on Iran’s economy.

Iran continued to abide by the agreement until last summer, when it began openly breaching some of its limits, saying it would not be bound by the deal if it saw none of its promised economic benefits. After the Jan. 3 air strike that killed Gen. Qassem Soleimani, the architect of Iran’s regional military operations, it said it would abandon all restrictio­ns in the nuclear deal.

Thus far, however, it has only modestly increased its nuclear activity. In recent months it has boosted its enrichment of uranium to 4.5% — higher than the 3.67% limit set by the agreement but far from the 20% enrichment it was engaged in before the deal. Uranium must be enriched to 90% to be used in a nuclear weapon.

Britain, France and Germany have spent months trying to salvage the deal, but have not found a way to continue trading with Iran amid the tightened U.S. sanctions. Earlier this week, they triggered a dispute mechanism in the nuclear deal to try to bring Iran back into compliance. That process could lead to the snapback of internatio­nal sanctions.

 ?? Iranian Presidency ?? President Hassan Rouhani said the nuclear program is in a “better situation” now than before.
Iranian Presidency President Hassan Rouhani said the nuclear program is in a “better situation” now than before.

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