Yahoo – AFP,
Eric Randolph, 13 January 2018
Iran on Saturday rejected any modification of its nuclear deal with world powers after US President Donald Trump demanded tough new measures to keep the agreement alive.
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| Iran's Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif said the 2015 nuclear deal with world powers could not be renegotiated |
Iran on Saturday rejected any modification of its nuclear deal with world powers after US President Donald Trump demanded tough new measures to keep the agreement alive.
Iran
"will not accept any amendments in this agreement, be it now or in the
future, and it will not allow any other issues to be linked to the JCPOA",
the foreign ministry said in a statement, using the 2015 deal's technical name.
It has the
backing of all the partners to the agreement apart from the United States, with
Russia warning Washington on Saturday that withdrawing would be "a big
miscalculation".
"We
are gradually coming to the conclusion that an internal decision by the US to
leave the JCPOA has already been made or is close to being made," Deputy
Foreign Minister Sergei Ryabkov told the Interfax news agency.
"This
could be one of Washington's big foreign policy mistakes," he added.
Trump again
waived nuclear-related sanctions on Friday -- as required every few months to
stay in the agreement -- but demanded that European partners work with
Washington to "fix the deal's disastrous flaws, or the United States will
withdraw".
He said the
new deal should curb Iran's missile programme and include permanent
restrictions on the Islamic republic's nuclear plants, removing expiration
dates due to kick in after a decade.
The other
parties to the agreement -- Britain, China, France, Germany, Russia and the
European Union -- have all said the deal is working and that Iran is complying
fully with its commitments.
Britain and
Germany said Friday they had taken note of Trump's latest decision and would
confer with France before responding.
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| Map and factfile on the 2015 Iran nuclear deal |
'It makes
no difference'
On
Saturday, French President Emmanuel Macron stressed the "necessary respect
by all parties" of Iran's nuclear deal with world powers, in a telephone
call with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu.
However,
Israel's leader, a fierce critic of the deal, told Macron that changing the
nuclear deal would increase the chances of it remaining in place.
"Trump's
remarks should be taken seriously, and whoever wants to keep the nuclear deal
would be wise to fix it", a statement from Netanyahu's office read.
On the
streets of Tehran, many people have grown cynical and exasperated by the
endless pressure from the United States.
"It
doesn't make any difference. We have been under US sanctions for the last 40
years," said Farshad Alyan, a 26-year-old law student.
"Two
years ago when the JCPOA was signed we were so hopeful. We don't have that hope
any more."
Iran argues
that continued US sanctions on non-nuclear areas such as human rights and
missile testing have effectively barred it from gaining many of the financial
benefits expected from the deal.
Foreign
Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif has said Trump's aggressive stance on the deal
and Iran generally have also violated the commitment to "refrain from any
policy specifically intended to directly and adversely affect the normalisation
of trade and economic relations with Iran" in the accord.
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Many people
on the street in Tehran have grown cynical and exasperated
by the endless US
pressure
|
New
sanctions criticised
Many
analysts agree.
"Trump
has once again avoided the nuclear option on the nuclear deal. But the clear
reluctance with which he has issued the sanctions waivers will continue to
weigh on the business community," said Esfandyar Batmanghelidj, founder of
the Europe-Iran Forum, a business network.
"However,
if the 'adults in the room' prevailed this time and kept Trump from exiting the
deal, there remains hope they will prevail in the end," he added.
Responding
to Trump's speech late Friday, Zarif tweeted: "Rather than repeating tired
rhetoric, US must bring itself into full compliance -- just like Iran."
Saturday's
statement from Iran's foreign ministry further criticised new sanctions on 14
individuals announced by the US Treasury on Friday over human rights issues and
Iran's missile programme.
In
particular, placing judiciary chief Ayatollah Sadegh Larijani on the sanctions
list "crossed all red lines of conduct in the international community...
and the government of the United States will bear responsibility for all the
consequences of this hostile move".
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