The Denver Post

European allies uneasy as US restores Iran sanctions

- By Susannah George

WASHINGTON» As the Trump administra­tion readies to re-impose sanctions on Iran that were lifted under the 2015 nuclear accord, America’s European allies fear greater regional instabilit­y.

President Donald Trump’s withdrawal from the landmark agreement, signed by the U.S. and five other world powers, remains one of the most consequent­ial foreign policy decisions of his presidency.

Trump administra­tion officials say the sanctions are being restored starting Monday in an effort to change the Iranian regime’s behavior. “They’re the world’s largest state sponsor of terror,” Secretary of State Mike Pompeo told Indonesian television in an interview Sunday. “That’s what America is trying to get Iran to stop doing. That’s the behavioral change that we’re looking for from the Iranian regime.”

But many U.S. allies believe that language is code for regime change, according to two European diplomats involved in negotiatio­ns with the Trump administra­tion over how sanctions would be re-imposed.

The sanctions that go back into effect on Monday cover Iranian trade in automobile­s and metals, including gold. The U.S. also has banned imports of Iranian products such as carpets and pistachios and revoked licenses that allowed Iran to purchase U.S. and European aircraft. Iran acquired five new European commercial planes on Sunday before the sales were cut off.

The last and most significan­t sanctions — those on Iran’s oil sector and central bank — will be restored on Nov. 4. Iranian oil sales are a crucial source of hard currency.

The nuclear deal lifted internatio­nal sanctions in exchange for Iran agreeing to restrictio­ns on its nuclear program. U.N. inspectors said Iran was complying with the deal, but Trump argued that it didn’t do enough to curb Iran’s malign activity in the region. Trump administra­tion officials also argued that because the U.S. lifted sanctions against Iran as part of the agreement, it in effect stripped Washington of one of its most powerful tools to penalize Tehran.

European countries say they remain committed to the agreement, seeing it as the surest way to safeguard their national security.

The problem is: What next?” one of the European diplomats said, referring to concerns that the U.S. is eyeing regime change as the sanctions’ end goal. Both diplomats spoke on condition of anonymity, as they were not authorized to brief the media on ongoing negotiatio­ns.

If the re-imposed sanctions caused the government in Tehran to collapse, Iran would likely devolve into civil war like what unfolded in Syria or radicals would assume power, the diplomat said.

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