The Borneo Post

US to trigger controvers­ial ‘snapback’ of Iran sanctions at UN

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WASHINGTON: President Donald Trump announced that Secretary of State Mike Pompeo will activate a controvers­ial mechanism aimed at reimposing UN sanctions on Iran, escalating a row with European allies that has huge repercussi­ons for the Iranian nuclear deal.

Pompeo will travel to New York on Thursday to notify the United Nations Security Council that the US is triggering the so-called ‘snapback’ procedure, which Britain, France and Germany say it doesn’t have the right to do.

“It’s a snapback, not uncommon,” Trump told reporters, despite the contested measure having never been used before.

The move comes after the United States suffered a humiliatin­g defeat at the Security Council last week when it failed to muster support for a resolution to extend a convention­al arms embargo on Iran.

‘Snapback’ aims to restore all internatio­nal sanctions against Iran that were lifted as part of the 2015 accord with Tehran that sought to prevent it from developing nuclear weapons.

But it also threatens to torpedo the historic Iran nuclear deal that the US, China, Russia, France, Britain and Germany signed with Tehran in 2015.

Trump withdrew the US from the agreement, known officially as the Joint Comprehens­ive Plan of Action (JCPOA), in 2018 and introduced American sanctions on Iran as part of a ‘maximum pressure’ campaign against the Iranian regime.

Despite pulling out of the deal, America claims that, as a ‘participan­t’ of the original agreement, it has the power to unilateral­ly reimpose UN sanctions on Iran.

A 2015 UN Security Council resolution ratifying the agreement negotiated by former president Barack Obama says participat­ing states can unilateral­ly reinstall sanctions if Iran has failed to significan­tly comply with the accord.

The ‘snapback’ procedure is supposed to lead to the reestablis­hment of sanctions after 30 days, without the possibilit­y of Russia or China wielding their vetoes. European countries on the Security Council contest the US’ legal argument and fear that the return of sanctions will sink the nuclear deal, which they are battling to save.

“This will be (a) fully valid enforceabl­e UN Security Council resolution.

We have every expectatio­n that it will be enforced just like every other UN Security Council resolution that is in place,” Pompeo said.

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