I shall try and return to this later on
Iran Raises Enrichment of Uranium, Blames Europe for Failure to Fulfill Commitments to Nuclear Deal
Iran Raises Enrichment of Uranium, Blames Europe for Failure to Fulfill Commitments to Nuclear Deal
7
July, 2019
Iranian
Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif said on Monday that the country
had exceeded the 300 kilogram (660 pound) enriched uranium stockpile
limit set out by the 2015 deal, a fact that was then confirmed by the
International Atomic Energy Agency. As explained by President
Rouhani, Iran's move is an attempt to save the nuclear deal.
Iranian
authorities have announced that the country's enrichment of uranium
would surpass 3.6% "in a few hours", which is above the
limit set under the 2015 nuclear deal. Tehran has also vowed to
reduce its commitments to the nuclear deal every 60 days if the issue
is not resolved.
"If
these opportunities are not used, no one should doubt our seriousness
that the reduction of our commitments [under the JCPOA] will continue
every 60 days," Iranian Deputy Foreign Minister Abbas
Araghchi stressed.
According
to Araghchi, Europe has failed to fulfill its commitments to the
JCPOA, while "the doors of diplomacy are still open."
Araghchi
underlined that reducing Iran's commitments under the nuclear accord
went "in parallel with saving the JCPOA, and not destroying it,
this tendency may lead to discontinuing our participation in the
JCPOA."
However,
new initiatives are required, Araghchi said at a joint meeting of the
Iranian cabinet and the spokesman for the Atomic Energy Organization
of Iran, Behruz Kamalvandi.
"We
are not ready to stay in the JCPOA at any cost. Today, any steps that
we are taking on the uranium enrichment are aimed at saving the
JCPOA. Preserving the nuclear deal is a principle for us,"
government spokesman Ali Rabii said on Sunday.
The
announcement comes six days after Iranian Foreign Minister Javad
Zarif announced that Tehran would enrich
its uranium beyond
the 3.67 per cent level, outlined in the 2015 nuclear deal, and it
will maintain enrichment at a level that it considers necessary.
Commenting
on the decision, Iranian President Hassan Rouhani explained that
"Iran’s move to reduce its commitments is not aimed at
undermining the JCPOA, but also an attempt to save it; because we
believe that if we don’t do anything, the deal will be lost."
Following
the announcement, US President Donald Trump has warned Iran
to be "
careful
with threats"
in a tweet. Washington has also urged the International Atomic
Energy Agency (IAEA) to hold a special session to address
concerns of Iran's nuclear activity, US National Security
Adviser John Bolton announced on Friday.
The
EU has been voicing its strong support for the nuclear deal.
Particularly, on Saturday, French President Emmanuel
Macron had a phone call with
his Iranian counterpart in which they agreed to seek conditions for
restarting talks between all parties to the nuclear deal by 15 July.
Russia,
a party to the nuclear deal alongside European states, has also
reacted to Iran's announcement, with Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov
stating that Iran had exceeded its enriched uranium stockpile
limits due to US sanctions prohibiting the purchase of excessive
uranium from Tehran.
On
8 May, Iran announced that it was partially discontinuing its
obligations under
the JCPOA.
The decision came exactly a year after the United States fully
withdrew from the nuclear agreement and reimposed wide-ranging
sanctions on Iran.
Iran
also gave the other nuclear deal signatories — China, the European
Union, France, Germany, Russia and the United Kingdom — an
ultimatum, giving them 60 days to shield Tehran from Washington's
sanctions or else risk it further reducing its commitments.
Earlier,
Donald Trump confirmed that the Pentagon will deploy 1,500 more
troops to the Middle East amid tensions with Iran.
The
United States scrapped its sanctions waivers on Iranian oil in May.
The waivers were issued last year, after President Trump pulled the
US out of the 2015 Iran nuclear deal and placed tough banking, energy
and other restrictions on the country.
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