Kuwait Times

Europe toughens stance on Iran, US over nuke dispute

A blow to Tehran amid nuclear standoff

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PARIS: Europe has toughened its stance on Iran and warned the US against sanctions in the latest bid to stop the unraveling of the internatio­nal agreement on Tehran’s nuclear program. The decision by Germany, France and Britain to back a UN arms embargo extension on Iran follows growing tensions with Tehran since US President Donald Trump unilateral­ly pulled out of the 2015 nuclear accord and introduced new sanctions.

The three European signatorie­s to the Iran nuclear deal said they had reservatio­ns about lifting the arms embargo, a blow to Tehran which had been calling for an end to the restrictio­ns. The joint statement by three European foreign ministers came after the UN nuclear watchdog on Friday also passed a resolution critical of Iran - the first since 2012 - and demanded Tehran allow more inspection­s of two of its nuclear sites.

Iran agreed with major world powers in 2015 to halt its nuclear program in return for an end to crippling sanctions. But since Trump pulled out of the deal, Iran has begun to roll back its own commitment­s, fuelling US criticism it wants to build nuclear arms, a claim Tehran denies. The ban on selling weapons - such as battle tanks, combat aircraft, warships and missiles or missile systems - to Iran had been set to be progressiv­ely eased from October. “We believe that the planned lifting of the UN convention­al arms embargo establishe­d by Resolution 2231 next October would have major implicatio­ns for regional security and stability,” the European ministers said.

But the European nations, who remain committed to the nuclear deal, also said they opposed Washington’s “maximum” pressure tactics with sanctions. “We firmly believe that any unilateral attempt to trigger UN sanctions snapback would have serious adverse consequenc­es” in the UN Security Council, they said. Iranian President Hassan Rouhani earlier this month urged UN Security Council members to oppose a US “conspiracy” to extend the arms embargo. The three European powers said they plan to address the arms embargo issue “in close coordinati­on” with UN Security Council permanent members Russia and China.

Need for inspection­s

The Internatio­nal Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) earlier on Friday passed a resolution put forward by European states, urging Tehran to provide inspectors access to two sites in Iran to help clarify whether undeclared nuclear activity took place there in the early 2000s. It calls on Iran to fully cooperate with the IAEA and satisfy its requests without delay, including by providing prompt access to the sites. Iran has been blocking access to the sites for months, prompting a growing diplomatic row. US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo, who has advocated a hard line against Iran on multiple fronts, said Tehran must “immediatel­y comply” or face consequenc­es.

“If Iran fails to cooperate, the internatio­nal community must be prepared to take further action,” he said in a statement. But Iran’s envoy to the UN in Vienna, Kazem Gharib Abadi, insisted the resolution will not “encourage Iran to grant access to the Agency based on fabricated and unfounded allegation­s”. “Iran categorica­lly deplores this resolution and will take appropriat­e action in response,” he said. Even though the sites in question are not thought to be directly relevant to Iran’s current nuclear program, the agency says it needs to know if activities going back almost two decades have been properly declared and all materials accounted for. — AFP

Washington warned against sanctions

 ??  ?? This picture made available by the Iranian armed forces office on June 18, 2020 shows a missile being fired out to sea from a mobile launch vehicle reportedly on the southern coast of Iran along the Gulf of Oman during a military exercise. — AFP
This picture made available by the Iranian armed forces office on June 18, 2020 shows a missile being fired out to sea from a mobile launch vehicle reportedly on the southern coast of Iran along the Gulf of Oman during a military exercise. — AFP
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