The Mercury News

Trump delivers ultimatum on Iran deal

President still demands nuclear agreement fix; agrees to extend economic sanction waivers

- By Matthew Lee

WASHINGTON >> President Donald Trump on Friday delivered an ultimatum to America’s European allies to fix the “terrible flaws” in the Iran nuclear deal, or he’ll pull the U.S. out in a few months’ time.

Trump made the threat as he extended waivers of key economic sanctions on Iran, keeping the accord alive at least for now. But his explicit warning to Europe that the deal must be fixed by the time the next sanctions waivers are due in the spring creates a high-stakes diplomatic deadline that will be difficult to meet.

“This is a last chance,” Trump warned in a statement that outlined several tough new rules on Iran. “In the absence of such an agreement, the United States will not again waive sanctions in order to stay in the Iran nuclear deal.”

Trump’s declaratio­n puts great pressure on Britain, France and Germany, the European signatorie­s to nuclear pact with Iran. Trump wants them to help the U.S. devise a new agreement designed to prevent Iran from escalating nuclear activity again next decade, as permitted under the 2015 arrangemen­t reached by President Barack Obama.

Iran has said it’s not interested in any renegotiat­ion and would almost certainly view a side agreement between the U.S. and Europe as a violation of the deal. The Europeans, meanwhile, have said they are willing to discuss the matter with the U.S. but have shown little enthusiasm with Trump’s hard line.

Iranian Foreign Minister Mohamed Javad Zarif accused Trump of “maliciousl­y violating” the nuclear deal.

“Trump’s policy (and) today’s announceme­nt amount to desperate attempts to undermine a solid multilater­al agreement,” Zarif tweeted shortly after Trump’s statement. “Rather than repeating tired rhetoric, US must bring itself into full compliance — just like Iran.”

The sanctions Trump had to waive Friday dealt with Iran’s central bank. These penalties largely cut Iran out of the internatio­nal financial system, until they were suspended by Obama under the nuclear deal. Trump is also waiving other U.S. penalties covered by the agreement, including on Iran’s oil and gas sectors, which were up for renewal next week.

Trump will next have to deal with these decisions in mid-May.

He paired Friday’s concession with other, targeted sanctions on Iran for human rights abuses and ballistic missile developmen­t. The Treasury Department’s action hits 14 Iranian officials and companies and businessme­n from Iran, China and Malaysia, freezing any assets they have in the U.S. and banning Americans from doing business with them.

 ?? VIRGINIA MAYO — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Iranian Foreign Minister Jawad Zarif, center right, speaks with Belgian Foreign Minister Didier Reynders during a meeting at the Egmont Palace in Brussels on Thursday.
VIRGINIA MAYO — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Iranian Foreign Minister Jawad Zarif, center right, speaks with Belgian Foreign Minister Didier Reynders during a meeting at the Egmont Palace in Brussels on Thursday.

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