January 14, 2020
By John Irish and Guy Faulconbridge
PARIS/LONDON (Reuters) – France, Britain and Germany formally
triggered the dispute mechanism in Iran’s nuclear deal on Tuesday, the
strongest step the Europeans have taken so far to enforce an agreement
that requires Iran to curb its nuclear program.
The European powers said they were acting to avoid a crisis over
nuclear proliferation adding to an escalating confrontation in the
Middle East.
In a statement, they said they still want the nuclear deal to succeed
and were not joining a “maximum pressure” campaign against Iran by the
United States, which abandoned the deal in 2018 and has reimposed
crippling economic sanctions.
Triggering the dispute mechanism amounts to formally accusing Iran of
violating the terms of the agreement and could lead eventually to the
reimposition of U.N. sanctions that were lifted under the deal.
Iran has gradually rolled back its commitments under the accord since
the United States quit. Tehran argues that it has the right to do so
because of Washington’s actions.
“We do not accept the argument that Iran is entitled to reduce
compliance with the JCPoA,” the three European countries said in a joint
statement, using the formal name of the agreement, the Joint
Comprehensive Plan of Action.
In triggering the dispute mechanism, “our three countries are not
joining a campaign to implement maximum pressure against Iran. Our hope
is to bring Iran back into full compliance with its commitments under
the JCPoA.”
Iran has long accused the Europeans of reneging on promises to
protect its economy from U.S. sanctions. Foreign ministry spokesman
Abbas Mousavi dismissed the “completely passive action” of the three
countries and said Iran would support any act of “goodwill and
constructive effort” to save the agreement.
NOTIFICATION
To trigger the dispute mechanism, the three European countries
notified the European Union, which acts as guarantor of the agreement.
EU foreign policy chief Joseph Borrell said the aim was not to reimpose
sanctions but to ensure compliance.
After months of announcing gradual steps to reduce compliance, Iran
said on Jan. 6 it would scrap all limits on enriching uranium.
The nuclear diplomacy is at the heart of a broader confrontation
between Iran and the United States, which killed Iran’s most powerful
military commander in a drone strike on Jan. 3. Iran has since seen an
outpouring of domestic unrest after accidentally shooting down a
Ukrainian airliner.
The European countries said they were acting “in good faith with the overarching objective of preserving the JCPoA”.
“Given recent events, it is all the more important that we do not add
a nuclear proliferation crisis to the current escalation threatening
the whole region,” they said.
“TRUMP DEAL”
U.S. President Donald Trump abandoned the nuclear deal reached under
his predecessor Barack Obama, arguing it was too weak and new sanctions
would force Iran to accept more stringent terms. Iran says it will not
negotiate with sanctions in place.
British Prime Minister Boris Johnson said on Tuesday the way forward was to agree a new “Trump deal”.
“If we’re going to get rid of it, let’s replace it and let’s replace
it with the Trump deal,” Johnson said. “President Trump is a great
dealmaker, by his own account. Let’s work together to replace the JCPoA
and get the Trump deal instead.”
Under the 2015 deal’s dispute mechanism, the EU should now inform the
other parties – Russia and China as well as Iran – of the European
move. There would then be 15 days to resolve differences, a deadline
which can be extended by consensus.
The process can ultimately lead to a “snapback” – the reimposition of sanctions under previous U.N. resolutions.
“At one point we have to show our credibility,” said a European
diplomat. A second diplomat said: “Our intention is not to restore
sanctions, but to resolve our differences through the very mechanism
that was created in the deal.”
https://www.oann.com/europeans-to-trigger-iran-nuclear-deal-dispute-mechanism/