Gulf Today

UNSC discusses Iran’s ballistic missile launch

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US, Britain and France have said that Tehran flouted UN restrictio­ns by testing a medium-range ballistic missile on Dec.1, however, there was no push for council action against Tehran

UNITED NATIONS: The United Nations Security Council met behind closed doors on Tuesday over a medium-range ballistic missile test by Iran that the United States, Britain and France said flouted UN restrictio­ns on Tehran’s missile programme.

However, there is no push for council action over the Dec.1 launch as it would likely fail.

Under a 2015 UN resolution, Iran is “called upon” to refrain from work on ballistic missiles designed to deliver nuclear weapons for up to eight years. Some states argue that the language does not make it obligatory.

“There is no legitimate reason why Iran should lout the resolution,” said Britain’s UN Ambassador Karen Pierce, who called for the council discussion on Tuesday along with her French counterpar­t Francois Delattre.

“If you wanted to demonstrat­e to the internatio­nal community that you were a responsibl­e member of it and you were genuinely interested in regional peace and security, these are not the sorts of missiles you would be test launching,” she said.

Most UN sanctions were lifted in 2016 under a deal Iran made with world powers to curb its nuclear programme. But Iran is still subject to an arms embargo and other restrictio­ns, which are not technicall­y part of the nuclear agreement.

UN Secretary-general Antonio Guterres reports every six months to the Security Council on the implementa­tion of the remaining sanctions and restrictio­ns. He is due to submit his next report later this month.

Iran’s UN mission said in a statement on Tuesday that Tehran was not in breach of the resolution and that its missiles were only designed to be capable of delivering convention­al - not nuclear - warheads.

“Iran has never sought to acquire nuclear weapons and never will in the future,” the Iranian UN mission said.

Iran wants to increase the range of its missiles, a senior military oficial was quoted as saying earlier on Tuesday. Iran’s military has cited 2,000 km as the current missile range.

The 2015 UN resolution also enshrines the nuclear deal, which US President Donald Trump quit in May.

He has reimposed sanctions on Tehran and criticized the deal for not including curbs on Iran’s developmen­t of ballistic missiles or its support for proxies in Syria, Yemen, Lebanon and Iraq.

 ??  ?? Karen Pierce
Karen Pierce

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