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Europe powerless as Iran nuclear deal unravels
By Fabien ZAMORA
Paris (AFP) June 27, 2019

Iran won't exceed uranium stockpile limit on Thursday: diplomatic source
Vienna (AFP) June 27, 2019 - Iran will not exceed Thursday a uranium stockpile limit agreed under a nuclear deal with world powers, contrary to what Tehran said earlier this month, according to a diplomatic source in Vienna.

"They won't exceed it today," the source told AFP, speaking on condition of anonymity.

The source suggested there might be a "political reason" for this, given intensified efforts by European governments in recent days to de-escalate tensions in the Gulf region.

There was no indication to suggest the agreed limit would be exceeded this weekend either, the source added, saying that Tehran can suspend its uranium enrichment activities at any time.

Iran said 10 days ago that it would surpass the agreed 300-kilogram (660-pound) reserve of enriched uranium on June 27 because it no longer felt bound by certain limits contained in the 2015 deal which the United States unilaterally pulled out of in May 2018.

Also speaking on condition of anonymity, an Iranian official said the reason the limit had not yet been breached was a "technical matter", not a political one, pointing to the fact that Thursday and Friday are the weekend in Iran.

He said that Iran's planned breaches of JCPOA limits could swiftly be reversed "if our demands are met".

"Our demand is to be able to sell our oil," he said, adding: "We used to sell more than $50 billion of oil (annually) before the US withdrawal -- that should materialise again."

If this did not happen, "there is not a single reason (for Iran) to stay in the deal anymore," the official said.

- 'Economic war' -

While others have struck a gloomy note on the prospects of a breakthrough at a meeting on Friday between the remaining parties to the JCPOA, Iran's ambassador to the UN Majid Takht Ravanchi told reporters Thursday that he hoped "certain ideas can come forward and tangible results can be achieved so that we can reverse our decision".

Tehran has also threatened to start enriching uranium above the agreed purification level of 3.67 percent starting from July 7.

Under the landmark deal signed with world powers in 2015, Iran pledged to reduce its nuclear capacities for several years and to allow international inspectors into the country to monitor its activities in return for relief from international sanctions.

The deal set a limit on the number of uranium-enriching centrifuges, and restricted Iran's right to enrich uranium beyond 3.67 percent, well below weapons-grade levels of about 90 percent.

But the deal has come under severe strain since Washington pulled out of it last year and slapped new economic sanctions on the Islamic republic.

Speaking at a seminar on the effects of sanctions organised in Vienna by diplomats from Iran, Cuba and Venezuela, Iranian Deputy Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi said Thursday: "We are in the middle of an economic war with the US, not a military war -- yet."

"There will be no de-escalation unless there is a ceasefire in this economic war" which had been declared by the US, Araghchi said.

On Tuesday, in a gesture seemingly aimed at reining in tensions with the US, Iranian President Hassan Rouhani told French President Emmanuel Macron in a telephone call that Iran "never seeks war" with any country.

Macron, for his part, said on the sidelines of a G20 meeting in Tokyo that he would do "the maximum" to "avert military escalation" between Iran and the US.

US President Donald Trump said Wednesday he does not want a war with Iran, but warned that if fighting did break out, it "wouldn't last very long".

The 2015 Iranian nuclear deal, hailed at the time as a historic boost for regional peace, is unravelling before the eyes of its European backers who appear powerless in the face of US rejection of the accord, analysts say.

The United States, under the presidency of Barack Obama, was among the powers that clinched the deal. But in May 2018, Donald Trump declared he was abandoning the signature foreign policy achievement of his predecessor.

European powers led by Germany and France have sought to salvage the deal but analysts say the accord appears all but doomed as the risk of military confrontation between Tehran and Washington grows.

Frustrated it was not getting the promised benefits of the deal following the US withdrawal, Iran last month said it would stop respecting the agreed limits on stockpiles of enriched uranium as well as those for heavy water.

"Everything was sealed after the decision by Donald Trump," Bruno Tertrais, deputy director of France's Foundation for Strategic Research (FRS), told AFP.

- 'Without concession' -

The 2015 accord promised Iran relief from international sanctions that had crippled its economy for years, in return for guarantees about the peaceful nature of its nuclear programme which Western powers fear could be used to make a bomb.

The problem is that the global economy is so connected it is near impossible for European companies to deal seriously with Iran without incurring the wrath of the United States, analysts say.

EU companies are still haunted by the $8.9-billion fine handed to French bank BNP Paribas in June 2014 after it pled guilty to US criminal charges of violating sanctions on Cuba, Iran and Sudan for eight years.

"European companies are more globalised while the US policy under Trump is without any concession," said Tertrais.

- 'In intensive care' -

EU officials have insisted the deal is not dead and have engaged in intense diplomacy with Tehran, despite an upsurge of tensions in the Gulf following the sabotage of tankers the US has blamed on Iran.

President Emmanuel Macron's diplomatic advisor Emmanuel Bonne and German Foreign Minister Heiko Maas have both visited Tehran this month.

EU powers have sought to keep the nuclear deal alive with a special trade mechanism called INSTEX that would allow legitimate trade with Iran without falling foul of US sanctions. But it is not fully operational.

"I would not say the deal is dead yet, but certainly it is in intensive care," said Annalisa Perteghella, research fellow at the Italian Institute for International Political Studies (ISPI).

"We are witnessing some efforts to resuscitate it but if I look at the future, I can't see it leaving the hospital safe and sound," she added.

She said instruments such as INSTEX promoted by the European Union to revive the deal have "proven worthless in the face of the tremendous economic leverage the US still has on financial markets".

Even if key EU powers such as Germany were not sympathetic to Trump, they would in no way risk their own companies' exports to the United States for the sake of standing up to Washington, she said.

In order to sway Trump, "you have a credible instrument for retaliation, and the EU, as of today, simply lacks it," she said.

- 'Poor record' -

Rakesh Sood, a former Indian ambassador and now distinguished fellow at the New Delhi-based Observer Research Foundation (ORF), said the nuclear deal was a test to see if the EU can be a serious political player with a credible foreign policy.

"So far the record has been poor and all it has is an anaemic INSTEX to show for it," he said.

A diplomatic source in Vienna, the headquarters of the UN atomic agency, said Iran would not exceed on Thursday the uranium stockpile limit agreed in the deal, despite Tehran previously giving June 27 as the date.

The source said there might be a "political reason" for this, given intensified efforts by European governments in recent days.

But while EU powers battle to show there is still life in the deal, scepticism is growing over whether it is just to keep up appearances.

"Saying that we are going to keep the deal is right in principle but in reality, we cannot," former French foreign minister Hubert Vedrine told RFI radio.

fz-sjw/klm

BNP Paribas


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Washington (UPI) Jun 13, 2019
The House Armed Services Committee rejected two Republican amendments to the defense appropriations bill for additional funding and deployment of low-yield nuclear warheads. After a heated debate during markup of the 2020 National Defense Authorization Act on Wednesday, the committee voted to reject the amendments in two 30-26 votes. Democrats hold a 31-26 majority on the panel. The marathon hearing ended about 7 a.m. Thursday as the $733 billion defense policy bill was approved a ... read more

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