The European
Union vowed to preserve the Iran nuclear deal on Tuesday, which might put the
bloc on a collision course with the one country that does want to end the deal:
the United States.
U.S.
President Donald Trump announced he was withdrawing his country from the
international agreement, which is aimed at preventing Iran from developing a
nuclear weapon in exchange for the lifting of economic sanctions.
“As long as
Iran continues to implement its nuclear-related commitments, as it is doing so
far, the EU will remain committed to the continued full and effective
implementation of the nuclear deal,’’ said EU Foreign Policy Chief, Federica
Mogherini, just minutes after Trump’s announcement.
“The EU is
determined to preserve it. We expect the rest of the international community to
continue to do its part to guarantee that it continues to be fully implemented,
for the sake of our own collective security.’’
While the
withdrawal of the US doesn’t automatically end the deal, the re-imposition of
US sanctions will essentially make it moot as Iran would not be able to enjoy
most of its economic benefits due to insecurities tied to the US sanctions.
“Our
governments remain committed to ensuring the agreement is upheld.
“Our
governments will work with all the remaining parties to the deal to ensure this
remains the case, including through ensuring the continuing economic benefits
to the Iranian people that are linked to the agreement,’’ the leaders of
Germany, France and Britain said in a statement.
German
Chancellor Angela Merkel, French President Emmanuel Macron and British Prime
Minister Theresa May also urged the U.S. “to avoid taking action which
obstructs’’ the implementation of the deal.
The 2015
deal was struck between six global powers – Britain, China, France, Germany,
Russia and the U.S. – and Iran with the EU, playing a key role coordinating the
diplomatic efforts.
“This is one
of the rare concrete achievements of EU multilateral diplomacy in the past
years,’’ said Ali Vaez, Director of the Iran Project at the International
Crisis Group, a non-governmental organisation dedicated to preventing crises.
Preserving
that deal might put the EU on a collision course with the US.
“The U.S.
remains our closest partner and friend and we will continue to work together on
many other issues,’’ Mogherini said.
However, she
noted, the nuclear deal was “not in the hands of any single country to
terminate it unilaterally.’’
Signalling
the growing divide, European Council President Donald Tusk said on Twitter that
U.S. policies would be met with “a united European approach.’’
He said EU
leaders, who are set to meet in Sofia next week for a summit, would discuss the
U.S. decision to leave the Iran deal and to impose tariffs on steel and
aluminium products, from which the EU is still trying to get a permanent
exemption.
Mogherini
also had some words of encouragement to Iran’s citizens and leaders – that also
contained some veiled criticism of Trump’s decision.
“Do not let
anyone dismantle this agreement,’’ she said.
“It is one
of the biggest achievements diplomacy has ever delivered, and we have built
this together.’’
She said the
deal was a “win-win” solution that demonstrated that “respect can be a
universal language.’’
“Stay true
to your commitments as we will stay true to ours and together, with the rest of
the international community, we will preserve this nuclear deal,’’ she said.
(dpa/NAN)
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