Cape Argus

US backs sanctions plan against Iran

Any new US sanctions would be ‘targeted narrowly at people and entities’

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ANY MOVE by the EU to impose new sanctions on Iran over its ballistic missile programme and alleged involvemen­t in Middle East conflicts would be “interestin­g and helpful”, a US administra­tion official said yesterday.

US President Donald Trump, who has taken a more hawkish line on Iran than his predecesso­r Barack Obama, has said Tehran’s missile programme should be curbed and wants to punish Tehran over its role in Yemen and Syria.

Trump has also dealt a blow to an internatio­nal 2015 deal on Iran’s nuclear programme by disavowing Iran’s compliance with its terms. The US Congress now has until mid-December to decide whether to reimpose economic sanctions on Iran that had been lifted in exchange for it limiting its nuclear activity.

But the EU, which normally co-ordinates closely with Washington on internatio­nal sanctions, has been lobbying hard to preserve the nuclear accord, saying it should be kept separate from missile and regional security matters.

Last week, French President Emmanuel Macron mooted the possibilit­y of fresh sanctions, saying he was “very concerned” about Iran’s missile programme following the firing of a missile from Yemen into Saudi Arabia.

“It would certainly be a very interestin­g and probably helpful move on the part of the EU,” the US administra­tion official told reporters in Brussels when asked if Washington wanted the EU to pursue fresh restrictio­ns on Iran.

The missile fired into Saudi Arabia from Yemen on November 4 was intercepte­d near Riyadh airport and there were no casualties. Saudi Arabia, which intervened against Iran-backed Houthi rebels in Yemen’s war in 2015, accuses the Islamic Republic of supplying missiles and other weaponry to the Houthis.

Tehran denies this and it also rejected Macron’s remarks, saying its missile programme was solely defensive and not linked to the nuclear pact, which European powers, Russia and China – the other parties to the 2015 deal – say is vital to containing Middle East tensions.

And there is no consensus in the EU, where imposing any sanctions requires the unanimity of all 28 member states on any new punitive measures, a fact made clear by the bloc’s top diplomat after chairing foreign minister talks on Monday.

“We didn’t discuss, not today, not last week and I don’t foresee any discussion also in the future, on further sanctions from the EU side on Iran,” EU foreign policy chief Federica Mogherini told reporters when asked about Macron’s comments.

“Ballistic missiles are not in the scope of the (nuclear deal),” she said. “This is a discussion and a proposal that was never raised at our table in these recent months and I don’t foresee this happening in the near future.”

Iran and Saudi Arabia are locked in a struggle for Middle East predominan­ce.

Their rivalry flared again earlier this month with the resignatio­n of Saudibacke­d Lebanese Prime Minister Saad al-Hariri, who blamed an alleged assassinat­ion plot against him and accused Tehran and its heavily armed Lebanese ally Hezbollah of sowing conflict in the Arab world.

The US administra­tion official declined to say what the Congress might do in the wake of Trump’s action but said any new US sanctions would be targeted narrowly at people and entities involved directly in the areas of concern.

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