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EU urges Iran to 'preserve' nuclear deal

January 16, 2020
High Representative of the Union for Foreign Affairs and Security Policy Josep Borrell gives a press conference during the EU foreign ministers emergency talks on Iran at the Europa building in Brussels in this Jan. 10, 2020 file photo. — AFP
High Representative of the Union for Foreign Affairs and Security Policy Josep Borrell gives a press conference during the EU foreign ministers emergency talks on Iran at the Europa building in Brussels in this Jan. 10, 2020 file photo. — AFP

BRUSSELS — The European Union's top diplomat met Iran's foreign minister in India on Thursday to press Tehran to "preserve" the increasingly fragile nuclear deal, according to a statement released in Brussels.

In his talks with Mohammad Javad Zarif in New Delhi, Josep Borrell warned that the deal was "more important than ever" given rising tensions in the Middle East, the statement said.

The two had "a frank dialogue" in which Borrell "underlined the continued interest of the European Union to preserve the agreement".

The accord between Iran and world powers was struck in 2015 to ensure that Tehran could not develop nuclear weapons.

But the deal has been weakened, first by a US withdrawal in 2018 and the return of sanctions on Iran, and by a series of retreats by Tehran from its obligations under the agreement.

Heightened military tensions between the United States and Iran, spurred by America's killing of a top Iranian general in Iraq and a retaliatory Iranian missile salvo on bases used by US soldiers, has put the deal under greater pressure.

This week, European powers France, Germany and Britain said they were triggering a dispute mechanism over Iran's pullbacks.

While that could theoretically eventually lead to a return of UN and EU sanctions on Iran, European officials have made clear that the decision was made in a bid to bring Tehran back into compliance and save the accord.

The EU sees itself as an "honest broker" in the accord's implementation, but takes its lead on Iran's degree of compliance from the UN nuclear watchdog, the IAEA, which continues to monitor Iranian atomic activities on the ground.

Iran has reacted angrily to the European countries' decision. Zarif accused them of having "sold out" what remains of the nuclear deal to avoid new US tariffs on European exports.

His comment referred to a report by the Washington Post newspaper saying President Donald Trump's government had renewed a threat to slap a 25 percent tariff on European car exports if the three EU governments held back.

The EU's position is further complicated by Britain's exit from the European bloc, expected in two weeks.

British Prime Minister Boris Johnson has voiced support for the tottering Iran nuclear accord to be replaced by a "Trump deal" — something France and Germany do not see as possible given Tehran's steadfast refusal to negotiate with the US. — AFP


January 16, 2020
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