The United States has moved to restore all UN sanctions on Iran, arguing Tehran is violating a nuclear deal it struck with world powers in 2015 – which Washington itself abandoned two years ago.
The US submitted a letter to the 15-member UN Security Council accusing Tehran of non-compliance, starting a 30-day clock that could lead to the “snapback” of UN sanctions even though remaining parties to the nuclear deal oppose this.
The move, taken partly because of the impending October expiration of a UN arms embargo on Tehran, drew condemnation from Iran, which said the US had no right to trigger the re-imposition because it had abandoned the nuclear agreement.
“It is an enormous mistake not to extend this arms embargo. It’s nuts!” the US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo told reporters at the United Nations as he harshly criticised what he described as the “one-sided, foolish” nuclear deal negotiated by former US President Barack Obama.
A snapback of UN sanctions would reimpose the conventional arms embargo, ban Iran from developing ballistic missiles capable of delivering nuclear weapons and bring back targeted sanctions on dozens of individuals and entities.
It would also require Iran to halt all nuclear enrichment-related and reprocessing activities, including research and development, and ban imports that could contribute to those activities or the development of nuclear arms delivery systems.
Read the article by Michelle Nichols and Parisa Hafezi in The Standard.