Hindustan Times (East UP)

Iran begins war games ahead of nuclear talks

- Letters@hindustant­imes.com

AFTER MONTHS OF DELAYS, THE EUROPEAN UNION, IRAN AND THE US ANNOUNCED LAST WEEK THAT INDIRECT TALKS TO RESUSCITAT­E THE DEAL WOULD RESUME ON NOVEMBER 29 IN VIENNA.

TEHRAN: Iran’s military began its annual war games in a coastal area of the Gulf of Oman, state TV reported on Sunday, less than a month before upcoming nuclear talks with the West.

The report said navy and air force units as well as ground forces were participat­ing in a more than 1 million square-kilometre area east of the strategic Strait of Hormuz.

Nearly 20% of all oil shipping passes through the strait to the Gulf of Oman and Indian Ocean.

The drill comes amid heightened tensions between Iran and the US in the wake of former President Donald Trump’s unilateral withdrawal of America from Iran’s 2015 nuclear deal with world powers. State TV said brigades including commandos and airborne infantry deployed for the annual exercise.

Fighter jets, helicopter­s, military transport aircraft, submarines and drones were also expected to take part in the drill. It wasn’t immediatel­y clear how long the exercise would last.

Dubbed “Zolfaghar-1400”, the war games are aimed at “improving readiness in confrontin­g foreign threats and any possible invasion”, state TV said.

US officials said last week that Iran had seized a Vietnamese-flagged oil tanker in the Gulf of Oman last month and was still holding the vessel in its port. Iran offered conflictin­g accounts of what happened, claiming that elite Revolution­ary

Guard commandos had thwarted a US seizure of a tanker carrying Iranian oil in the Gulf of Oman and freed the vessel. It aired dramatic footage on state television but did not further explain the incident.

The nuclear deal, known as the Joint Comprehens­ive Plan of Action, or JCPOA, promises Iran economic incentives in exchange for limits on its nuclear programme, and is meant to prevent Tehran from developing a nuclear bomb.

After the US withdrew from the deal in 2018 and restored sanctions on Iran, the Islamic Republic gradually - and publicly - abandoned the deal’s limits on its nuclear developmen­t.

Iran says its stockpile of 20% enriched uranium has reached over 210 kilogramme­s, the latest defiant move ahead of upcoming nuclear talks with the West.

Under the historic nuclear deal, Iran was prohibited from enriching uranium above 3.67%.

Enriched uranium above 90% can be used for nuclear weapons, though Tehran insists its nuclear programme is peaceful.

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