WASHINGTON
(Reuters) - U.S. President Donald Trump struck a blow against the 2015 Iran
nuclear agreement on Friday in defiance of other world powers, choosing no
t to
certify that Tehran is complying with the deal and warning he might ultimately
terminate it.
Trump
announced the major shift in U.S. policy in a speech in which he detailed a
more aggressive approach to Iran over its nuclear and ballistic missile
programs and its support for extremist groups in the Middle East.
He accused
Iran of “not living up to the spirit” of the nuclear agreement and said his
goal is to ensure Tehran never obtains a nuclear weapon, in effect throwing the
fate of the deal to Congress.
He singled
out Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps for sanctions and delivered a
blistering critique of Tehran, which he accused of destabilizing actions in
Syria, Yemen and Iraq.
“We will not
continue down a path whose predictable conclusion is more violence, more terror
and the very real threat of Iran’s nuclear breakout,” Trump said.
Trump’s
hardline remarks drew praise from Israel, Iran’s arch-foe, but was criticized
by European allies.
The move by
Trump was part of his “America First” approach to international agreements
which has led him to withdraw the United States from the Paris climate accord and
the Trans-Pacific Partnership trade talks and renegotiate the North American
Free Trade Agreement with Canada and Mexico.
His Iran
strategy angered Tehran and put Washington at odds with other signatories of
the accord - Britain, France, Germany, Russia, China and the European Union -
some of which have benefited economically from renewed trade with Iran.
Responding
to Trump, Iranian President Hassan Rouhani said on Friday on television that
Tehran was committed to the deal and accused Trump of making baseless
accusations.
“The Iranian
nation has not and will never bow to any foreign pressure,” he said. “Iran and
the deal are stronger than ever.”
European
allies have warned of a split with the United States over the nuclear agreement
and say that putting it in limbo as Trump has done undermines U.S. credibility
abroad, especially as international inspectors say Iran is in compliance with
the accord.
The chief of
the U.N. atomic watchdog reiterated that Iran was under the world’s “most
robust nuclear verification regime.”
“The
nuclear-related commitments undertaken by Iran under the JCPOA are being
implemented,” Yukiya Amano, director general of the International Atomic Energy
Agency said, referring to the deal by its formal name.
U.S.
Democrats expressed skepticism at Trump’s decision. Senator Ben Cardin said:
“At a moment when the United States and its allies face a nuclear crisis with
North Korea, the president has manufactured a new crisis that will isolate us
from our allies and partners.”
U.S.
President Donald Trump speaks about the Iran nuclear deal in the Diplomatic
Room of the White House in Washington, U.S., October 13, 2017. REUTERS/Kevin
Lamarque
CONGRESS
DECIDES
While Trump
did not pull the United States out of the agreement, he gave the U.S. Congress
60 days to decide whether to reimpose economic sanctions on Tehran that were
lifted under the pact.
If Congress
reimposes the sanctions, the United States would in effect be in violation of
the terms of the nuclear deal and it would likely fall apart. If lawmakers do
nothing, the deal remains in place.
Senate
Foreign Relations Committee Chairman Bob Corker was working on amending the
Iran Nuclear Agreement Review Act law to include “trigger points” that if
crossed by Iran would automatically reimpose U.S. sanctions.
Slideshow
(10 Images)
The trigger
points would address strengthening nuclear inspections, Iran’s ballistic
missile program and eliminate the deal’s “sunset clauses” under which some of
the restrictions on Iran’s nuclear program expire over time.
Trump
directed U.S. intelligence agencies to probe whether Iran might be working with
North Korea on its weapons programs.
The
president, who took office in January, had reluctantly certified the agreement
twice before but has repeatedly blasted it as “the worst deal ever.” It was
negotiated under his predecessor, former President Barack Obama.
Trump warned
that if “we are not able to reach a solution working with Congress and our
allies, then the agreement will be terminated.”
“We’ll see
what happens over the next short period of time and I can do that
instantaneously,” he told reporters when asked why he did not choose to scrap
the deal now.
The Trump
administration designated the entire Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps under an
executive order targeting terrorists. The administration stopped short of
labeling the group a Foreign Terrorist Organization, a list maintained by the
State Department.
The
Revolutionary Guard is the single most dominant player in Iran’s security,
political, and economic systems and wields enormous influence in Iran’s
domestic and foreign policies.
It had
already previously been sanctioned by the United States under other
authorities, and the immediate impact of Friday’s measure is likely to be
symbolic.
The U.S.
military said on Friday it was identifying new areas where it could work with
allies to put pressure on Iran in support of Trump’s new strategy and was
reviewing the positioning of U.S. forces.
But U.S.
Defense Secretary Jim Mattis said no changes in force posture had been made
yet, and Iran had not responded to Trump’s announcement with any provocative
acts so far.
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