Los Angeles Times

Trump likely to stay in Iran deal

President may refuse to certify the nuclear agreement but won’t kill it, official says.

- By Tracy Wilkinson and Brian Bennett tracy.wilkinson @latimes.com brian.bennett @latimes.com

WASHINGTON — With new deadlines looming, President Trump plans to again refuse to certify to Congress that the Iranian nuclear disarmamen­t deal is in America’s best interest — but will stop short of reimposing energy sanctions that could kill the landmark accord, according to a U.S. official involved in the process and a person familiar with the deliberati­ons.

The White House is expected to announce the president’s decision, which still could change, on Friday.

The moves would maintain the status quo in place since October, when Trump first declined to certify the deal to Congress but left it intact. The Obama administra­tion and five other world powers negotiated the accord with Iran in 2015 in an effort to block Tehran from building nuclear weapons.

Iran agreed to dismantle or destroy most of its nuclear infrastruc­ture under the agreement. In exchange, the global community agreed to ease economic sanctions related to the nuclear program. Trump has sharply criticized the deal, in part because it doesn’t limit Iranian developmen­t of ballistic missiles and support for militant groups in the Middle East.

Refusing to certify that the agreement is in the best interest of the U.S. allows Congress to weigh in but has no direct impact on the deal. Congressio­nal leaders have begun to look at ways to rewrite several key provisions, including possibly eliminatin­g sunset clauses and requiring more intrusive inspection­s, although it’s unlikely Iran would agree.

Sen. Bob Corker (RTenn.), who chairs the Senate Foreign Relations Committee and is involved in drafting the legislatio­n, said last week that a proposed bill is “moving along” but slowly.

Trump’s decision to waive sanctions is far more important. The sanctions relief granted under the nuclear deal opened world oil markets to Iran and allowed it to return to internatio­nal banking systems and trade, a key boost to its battered economy.

Under U.S. law, the White House must extend those waivers every four months. The next deadline is Friday, and others follow next week, although the administra­tion could delay announcing a decision by several days.

If Trump refuses to extend the waivers, the United States risks being in violation of the internatio­nal accord, which would be a diplomatic minefield. The U.S. not only would defy other members of the United Nations Security Council, which backed the deal, but it also could hand Iran a pretext to start limiting U.N. inspection­s or restart its nuclear program.

“Not certifying only creates the possibilit­y of U.S. noncomplia­nce,” said Jarrett Blanc, the State Department coordinato­r for implementi­ng the agreement under the Obama administra­tion. “Not waiving the sanctions presents a prima facie case for U.S. noncomplia­nce .... It is deeply uncharted territory.”

Trump’s top national security aides, including Secretary of State Rex Tillerson and Defense Secretary James N. Mattis, have said they don’t like the Iran pact but have urged Trump to stick with it. Tillerson also has worked with Germany, France and Britain to prepare to reimpose sanctions, as the deal allows, if Iran shows signs of backslidin­g.

Laura Holgate, former U.S. representa­tive to the Internatio­nal Atomic Energy Agency, the U.N. agency conducting nuclear inspection­s in Iran, said a unilateral White House decision to abrogate the deal would hurt global efforts to negotiate a solution to the nuclear impasse with North Korea.

“U.S. credibilit­y in terms of our willingnes­s to enter into internatio­nal agreements, or even our interest in so doing, has already been damaged, and this would be a major blow,” said Holgate, now a senior fellow at Harvard’s Belfer Center for Science and Internatio­nal Affairs.

The nuclear inspection agency has repeatedly verified that Iran is in compliance with the accord, which required Tehran to dismantle its main nuclear reactor, drasticall­y cut back on uranium enrichment, get rid of thousands of centrifuge­s and export most of its heavy water.

Despite the nuclear deal, most U.S. trade with and investment in Iran is banned under separate U.S. sanctions for the Islamic Republic’s human rights abuses, ballistic missiles and support for terrorism. U.S. sanctions also target the Islamic Revolution­ary Guard, the elite military force that is active in regional hot spots, including Yemen, Syria and Iraq.

Trump could move to expand those nonnuclear sanctions, targeting more government officials, or businesses owned by senior clerics, for example, without jeopardizi­ng the accord.

Trump’s decision on whether to stay in the nuclear deal, at least for now, has been complicate­d by his vocal support for anti-government protests that have erupted across Iran in recent weeks, focusing chiefly on economic concerns.

Critics and proponents of the nuclear accord disagree sharply over whether it has strengthen­ed, or undermined, Iran’s president, Hassan Rouhani, who negotiated the deal, or the hardliners in Tehran’s clerical leadership.

In a statement Wednesday, the White House said it was “deeply concerned” by reports that Iranian authoritie­s had arrested thousands of protesters, and it called for the immediate release of all political prisoners in Iran.

“We will not remain silent as the Iranian dictatorsh­ip represses the basic rights of its citizens and will hold Iran’s leaders accountabl­e for any violations,” the statement said. “The protesters in Iran are expressing legitimate grievances, including demanding an end to their government’s oppression, corruption and waste of national resources on military adventuris­m.”

Sen. Dianne Feinstein (D-Calif.) warned that reimposing sanctions would undercut the protesters’ aims. “Lifting sanctions helped expose their government’s corruption and mismanagem­ent of its economy, and reimposing them now would be turning our back on the Iranian people,” she said in a statement.

Iranian officials clearly are nervous about the decision that Trump will make.

“We are prepared for the worst-case scenario,” Majid Takht Ravanchi, a senior aide to Rouhani, told state media, “not only in the political field but even on the economic front.”

Iran’s atomic energy agency suggested that the country could resume and accelerate uranium enrichment if the sanctions are reimposed.

 ?? Virginia Mayo Associated Press ?? IN BRUSSELS, supporters wave f lags of the National Council of Resistance of Iran as they demonstrat­e outside European Union headquarte­rs before Thursday’s meeting. Foreign ministers of the EU and Iran have said talks will focus on preserving the 2015...
Virginia Mayo Associated Press IN BRUSSELS, supporters wave f lags of the National Council of Resistance of Iran as they demonstrat­e outside European Union headquarte­rs before Thursday’s meeting. Foreign ministers of the EU and Iran have said talks will focus on preserving the 2015...

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