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Trump rejects Iran deal, rips ‘murderous’ regime

Refuses to certify Tehran compliance with ‘worst’ accord.

- Mark Landler and David E. Sanger ©2017 The New York Times

WASHINGTON — President Donald Trump on Friday made good on a long-running threat to disavow the Iran nuclear deal that was negotiated by his predecesso­r, Barack Obama. But he stopped short of unraveling the accord or even rewriting it, as the deal’s defenders had once feared.

In a speech that mixed searing criticism of Iran with more measured action, Trump declared his intention not to certify Iran’s compliance with the agreement. Doing so essentiall­y kicks to Congress a decision about whether to reimpose sanctions on Iran, which would blow up the agreement.

“We will not continue down a path whose inevitable result is more violence, more chaos and Iran’s nuclear breakout,” Trump declared at the White House, as he laid out a broader strategy for confrontin­g Iran.

The president derided the deal as “one of the worst and most one-sided trans-action(s) the United States has ever entered into.” But he added, “What’s done is done, and that’s why we are where we are.”

Trump said he would ask Congress to establish “trigger points,” which could prompt the United States to reimpose sanctions on Iran if it crosses thresholds set by Congress.

“In the event we are not able to reach a solution working with Congress and our allies, then the agreement will be terminated,” he said.

Those could include continued ballistic missile launches by Iran, a refusal to extend the duration of constraint­s on its nuclear fuel production, or a conclusion by U.S. intelligen­ce agencies that Iran could produce a nuclear weapon in less than a year.

Trump denounced the Iranian government, saying it financed terrorist groups, imprisoned Americans, plotted attacks on troops, and fomented civil wars in Iraq, Yemen and Syria. “Given the regime’s murderous past and present,” he said, “we should not take lightly its sinister vision for the future.”

Enacting new legislatio­n on the agreement would require 60 votes in the Senate, meaning Republican­s would need to pick up some Democratic support.

Trump argues his strategy is far tougher on Iran than the Obama administra­tion was. The policy “focuses on neutralizi­ng the government of Iran’s destabiliz­ing influence and constraini­ng its aggression, particular­ly its support for terrorism and militants,” the White House said in a summary issued Thursday evening.

The nuclear deal is the latest internatio­nal agreement that Trump has tried to exit, amend or water down, including the Paris climate accord and the Trans-Pacific Partnershi­p.

Iran has said that it will not take part in any renegotiat­ion of an accord it also hammered out with three European countries, as well as with Russia and China. Persuading the Europeans — Britain, France and Germany — to reopen the negotiatio­ns could prove almost as difficult.

Even getting Congress, which is deeply divided on the Iran deal, to agree on additional legislatio­n may prove difficult. While some Republican­s are eager to undermine the deal, Democrats are equally determined to preserve what they view as another legacy of the Obama administra­tion that Trump is trying to dismantle.

On Thursday evening, Sen. Bob Corker, R-Tenn., chairman of the Foreign Relations Committee, released a potential blueprint toward imposing an automatic return of sanctions. Corker worked on the proposal with administra­tion officials and Sen. Tom Cotton, R-Ark., who is a hard-liner on Iran policy, and predicted it could earn bipartisan support.

Trump’s decision came after a fierce debate inside the administra­tion, according to a senior official familiar with the discussion­s and who agreed to describe them on condition of anonymity.

In addition to Secretary of State Rex Tillerson, Defense Secretary Jim Mattis argued that it was in the national security interests of the United States to keep the deal’s constraint­s on Iran. The two men succeeded in persuading Trump not to immediatel­y scrap an accord that he had said during last year’s presidenti­al campaign was a “disaster” and the “worst deal ever.”

For its part, Iran has rejected both reopening the existing agreement and negotiatin­g a successor agreement that would extend the restrictio­ns on producing nuclear fuel beyond the 15 years in the original accord.

Asked last month about the possibilit­y of new negotiatio­ns to extend the duration of restrictio­ns on Iran, Iran’s foreign minister, Mohammad Javad Zarif, said in an interview, “Are you prepared to return to us 10 tons of enriched uranium?”

That relinquish­ed stockpile — one of Iran’s biggest concession­s — was about 98 percent of the nuclear fuel holdings in the country’s possession and was the key assurance that Tehran could not rapidly produce a nuclear weapon.

 ?? DREW ANGERER / GETTY IMAGES ?? President Donald Trump disavows the Iran nuclear agreement in a speech Friday at the White House. A decision about reimposing sanctions on Tehran now goes to Congress.
DREW ANGERER / GETTY IMAGES President Donald Trump disavows the Iran nuclear agreement in a speech Friday at the White House. A decision about reimposing sanctions on Tehran now goes to Congress.

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