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Trump pullout from Iran deal signals Mideast strategic shift
By Val�rie LEROUX
Paris (AFP) May 11, 2018

Turkey says US Iran deal pullout 'opportunity' for Ankara
Ankara (AFP) May 11, 2018 - The Turkish economy minister on Friday said the United States withdrawal from the Iran nuclear deal was an "opportunity" for Turkey, insisting there would be no-let up in trade with Tehran.

Despite strong protests and last-minute lobbying by his European partners, US President Donald Trump announced that Washington would withdraw from the historic nuclear accord.

Trump then vowed that there would be fresh sanctions issued against Iran.

"I see it like this, this is an opportunity for Turkey," Nihat Zeybekci told state news agency Anadolu, adding: "I will continue to trade with Iran."

But he said that if there are United Nations decisions related to Iran's nuclear activities and other issues, "of course" trade would continue "complying with them".

Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan spoke on the phone with his Russian counterpart Vladimir Putin during which both men agreed the US move was a mistake.

Zeybekci criticised the unilateral decision by Washington but added: "I don't see anything big to worry about at this stage," noting that other countries including EU members were not of the same opinion as the US.

Relations between Turkey and the US have been strained over several issues including the conviction in January of a Turkish banker who helped Iran evade US sanctions.

Mehmet Haka Atilla was convicted after well-connected Turkish-Iranian businessman Reza Zarrab, arrested in the US in 2016, became a government witness and admitted involvement in a multi-billion-dollar gold-for-oil scheme to subvert US economic sanctions against Iran.

During Zarrab's testimony late last year, the businessman, who was once close to the ruling party elite, implicated Erdogan and other officials in the scheme.

In a deal negotiated between Iran and the five permanent members of the UN Security Council -- the UK, China, France, Russia and the US -- plus Germany, Iran agreed in 2015 to freeze its nuclear programme in exchange for the lifting of international sanctions.

Turkey and Iran together with Russia have been working closely on the Syrian peace process despite being on opposing sides of the seven-year conflict.

Erdogan on Thursday held a telephone call with Iranian President Hassan Rouhani during which the Turkish leader reiterated Turkey's commitment to JCPOA (the formal abbreviation for the accord).

The men also touched upon developing bilateral economic relations, a Turkish presidential source said.

US President Donald Trump's rejection of an accord curbing Iran's nuclear activities and the escalation in hostilities between Iran and Israel that followed herald a new strategic dynamic in the Middle East that has heightened fears of greater conflict.

While Europe is leading efforts to save the nuclear deal with Tehran, Iran's regional rivals Israel and Saudi Arabia both are behind Washington.

"The result is a coalition that rather goes against their nature," said Denis Bauchard, Middle East expert at the French Institute of International Relations (Ifri) in Paris.

As well as abandoning the nuclear agreement, Trump has controversially decided to move the US embassy from Tel Aviv to Jerusalem -- a nod to Israel and and affront to Palestinians who claim part of the contested city.

"Trump has decided to give complete, unreserved satisfaction to the Israelis," said Agnes Levallois, vice-president of the Mediterranean and Middle East research institute IREMMO.

Israel launched strikes against Iranian targets in Syria on Thursday, alleging that Iranians had fired rockets at its positions. Iran denied the claim.

Any such action by Iran is a red line for Israel -- and therefore for Washington too.

- Saudi influence -

Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman, for his part, wants his country to play a major role in the Gulf region and beyond.

He does not wish to see Tehran muscle in, says Hasni Abidi, director of the Study and Research Center for the Arab and Mediterranean World (CERMAM) in Geneva.

Joining Trump in denouncing an accord which limited Tehran's nuclear ambitions in exchange for sanctions relief was essential for Riyadh, Abidi said.

The lifting of economic sanctions under the deal was designed to boost the Iranian economy, allowing the country "to flourish on the regional and international stage", prompting Saudi concern.

Israel meanwhile said the accord failed to guarantee that Tehran would not ultimately develop nuclear weapons, having spent recent years developing a ballistic missiles programme.

Defenders of the accord insisted it could keep Iran's nuclear ambitions under wraps in the medium term.

Israel's strikes on Thursday sent a message to Tehran, says Levallois: "Now go home, desist from being (militarily) present in different theatres and in particular on the border with Israel."

- Careful timing -

The timing of the Israeli strikes, two days after Trump's announcement that he was abandoning the nuclear accord, was telling.

"The Israelis have chosen this moment to strike as they know Iran cannot respond militarily if it insists on saving an accord, which for it, is very important both in economic and political terms," said Abidi.

Under Trump, the US approach moves away from multilateral diplomacy encouraging instead the "use of force or the threat of it," in the region, notably from Israel.

French presidential officials say Iranian President Hassan Rouhani has called on European signatories to help keep the deal afloat.

In a phone call on Wednesday, French President Emmanuel Macron told Rouhani, however, that Paris ultimately wants to see an expanded accord dealing with Iran's ballistic missile development and its involvement in several Mideast crises.

- Slide to conflict? -

German Chancellor Angela Merkel warned Thursday of the threat of a potential slide towards outright conflict in the Middle East.

Abidi believes neither Israel nor Iran want war.

Bauchard said Iran will exercise a "certain prudence to avoid an escalation which they could not counter."

Levallois says that while the situation could degenerate, "I do not think the Iranians will run the risk of entering a military confrontation with Israel as they know full well they would not win."

Even so, an escalation could result if the accord putting Iran's nuclear ambitions on hold for at least a decade becomes moribund.

One French diplomat warns that "If Iran had nuclear weapons it is clear that could unleash a major proliferation crisis ... opening a Pandora's box."

Such a scenario is not one Saudi Arabia and Israel would allow to go unchallenged.


Related Links
Learn about nuclear weapons doctrine and defense at SpaceWar.com
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NUKEWARS
US says Iran nuclear inspections must continue
Washington (AFP) May 11, 2018
The White House wants intrusive inspections of Iran's nuclear sites to continue despite President Donald Trump's withdrawal from a landmark accord on Tehran's atomic program, US officials have told AFP. Days after the US president walked away from a three-year-old deal that mandated rigorous scrutiny of Iranian facilities, senior administration officials said monitoring should continue regardless. Known officially as the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action (JCPOA), the deal between Tehran and maj ... read more

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