Washington ‘unreliable’ following Iran nuclear deal threats
WASHINGTON: Iranian Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif branded Washington “unreliable” on Sunday in response to threats over the future of a nuclear deal with Iran.
“What the United States is doing, in addition to being unpredictable — which might sometimes work — is proving that it is unreliable,” Zarif told CNN.
The deal, agreed in 2015 between Iran and six world powers — the United States, China, Russia, France, Britain and Germany — lifts economic sanctions put in place in 2005 in exchange for curbs to Tehran’s nuclear programme.
The International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) is responsible for verifying that Iran meets the terms of the agreement.
But since arriving in the White House, Donald Trump has attacked the deal on numerous occasions, vowing to tear it up. “Frankly, that deal is an embarrassment to the United States, and I don’t think you’ve heard the last of it,” he told the UN General Assembly on Tuesday.
The president cast further doubt over the deal after the Islamic republic tested a new medium-range Khoramshahr missile Saturday. “Iran just test-fired a Ballistic Missile capable of reaching Israel. They are also working with North Korea. Not much of an agreement we have!” Trump tweeted.
But Zarif brushed off the threat, saying Washington cannot act alone to end the agreement. “This is not a bilateral agreement,” he told CNN’s Fareed Zakaria.
“It’s not even a multilateral treaty. It’s a Security Council agreement and the United States is a member of the Security Council.”
The foreign minister added that Donald Trump’s certification of whether Iran is abiding by the deal — due mid-October — is an “internal procedure” that in itself does not endanger the agreement. “The only authority that has been recognised in the nuclear deal to verify is the IAEA,” he said.
Published in Dawn, September 25th, 2017