International Support For Iran As IAEA Insists Tehran Stuck To Nuclear Deal
Saudi
Arabia and Israel have both expressed their praise for the U.S.
President’s move
14
October, 2017
In
response to the U.S. President Donald Trump’s decision
to decertify the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action,
JCPOA, with Tehran, the International
Atomic Energy Agency, IAEA, has
confirmed that Iran adhered to the nuclear deal.
“As
I have reported to the Board of Governors, the nuclear-related
commitments undertaken by Iran under the JCPOA are being
implemented,” the IAEA Director General Yukiya Amano said in a
statement following Trump’s announcement.
“The
IAEA’s verification and monitoring activities address all the
nuclear-related elements under the JCPOA. They are undertaken in an
impartial and objective manner and in accordance with the modalities
defined by the JCPOA and standard safeguards practice,” the UN
nuclear watchdog’s chief added.
The
European Union’s foreign policy chief Federica Mogherini emphasized
the same, adding that no one country could ax the deal, which was
agreed by the U.K., France, Germany, Russia, China and the U.S.
The
U.K.’s Prime Minister Theresa May, French President Emmanuel
Macron and German Chancellor Angela Merkel also released a joint
statement confirming their support for the deal.
Tehran
has slammed Trump’s decision as “delusional”, with Iranian
President Hassan Rouhani adding that Washington “is more isolated
than ever” and cannot change the nuclear deal unilaterally.
While
the Iranian Foreign Minister Javad Zarif posted his robust response
on Twitter.
In
contrast, two countries which have pressurized Trump to harden
his stance against Iran, Saudi Arabia and Israel, have both expressed
their praise for the U.S. President’s move.
The
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu lauded his “courageous
decision,” saying it had created an “opportunity to fix this bad
deal, to roll back Iran’s aggression and to confront its criminal
support of terrorism”.
“I
think that the speech was very significant. Iran is the new North
Korea. We see where things are going,” Israel’s Intelligence
Minister Yisrael Katz also told the Israeli Channel 2 television
network.
Meanwhile,
the official Saudi Press Agency released a statement saying its
government backs Trump.
“The
kingdom backs and welcomes the firm strategy on Iran and its
aggressive policy that was announced by US President Donald Trump,”
the statement read.
In
his announcement, Trump said he had chosen not to certify Tehran,
but would not immediately withdraw from it. He pushed the issue to
the U.S. Congress, which has 60 days to decide whether to reinstate
U.S. sanctions.
The
U.S. President called Iran a “regime” that “since the signing
of the nuclear agreement, (whose) dangerous actions (have) only
escalated.”
Trump
said he would also
impose sanctions on Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps, IRGC,
which he accused of supporting supposed “terrorism” across the
world, including the Middle East.
To
this, Rouhani asked, “Is it the IRGC that is corrupt or governments
and armed forces who have always intervened in this region against
the independence of nations?”
The
2015 agreement had agreed
to lift longtime, economic sanctions on the Iranian
government and its citizens, in exchange for the country’s
gradually-decreased production of enriched uranium and weapons-grade
plutonium. The IAEA was tasked with overseeing Iran’s compliance
with the deal.
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