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EU will send chief diplomat to fight for Iran deal in Washington

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The EU is to dispatch its chief diplomat Federica Mogherini to Washington next month to fight for the Iran nuclear deal after US President Donald Trump threatened to tear it up.

EU foreign ministers meeting in Luxembourg on Monday joined a chorus of international support for the landmark 2015 accord, warning that Trump's hardline stance was jeopardising efforts to find a peaceful solution to the nuclear crisis with North Korea.

Trump caused alarm across the Atlantic with a belligerent speech on Friday in which he stopped short of pulling out of the agreement but warned he could do so at any time, restating his belief that the deal was letting Iran off the hook.

He left it to the US Congress to decide whether to reimpose sanctions that were lifted in return for Tehran abandoning its nuclear ambitions.

US President Donald Trump speaks about the Iran deal from the Diplomatic Reception room of the White...
US President Donald Trump speaks about the Iran deal from the Diplomatic Reception room of the White House in Washington, DC, on October 13, 2017
Brendan SMIALOWSKI, AFP

Mogherini, the EU's foreign policy head, said she would "be in Washington in early November" to urge US lawmakers not to pull out of the deal, known officially as the JCPOA, which was negotiated with Iran over 12 painstaking years by the US, Britain, France, China, Germany and Russia.

Ditching the deal when Tehran has repeatedly been certified as keeping up its end of the bargain by UN inspectors would send a signal to North Korea that negotiating with the international community is a waste of time, EU ministers fear.

"Clearly the ministers are concerned about the fact that messages on the JCPOA might affect negatively the possibility of opening negotiations or opening even the space for negotiations with the DPRK," Mogherini told reporters after the bloc's 28 foreign ministers held talks in Luxembourg.

German Foreign Minister Sigmar Gabriel said Trump's hardline stance risked dragging the world back to a "military confrontation" with Iran.

"The threatened termination of the deal with Iran of course undermines the credibility of such international treaties," he said.

- N.Korean army blacklisted -

The Luxembourg meeting signed off on a new package of EU sanctions aimed at punishing Pyongyang for its recent nuclear and ballistic missile tests and drying up revenue streams it needs for its weapons programmes.

North Korea's army and armed forces ministry were both added to the sanctions blacklist, meaning any assets they hold in the EU will be frozen.

The EU hopes economic pressure will help bring the North to the bargaining table, but Mogherini said that undermining the Iran deal would make it harder to persuade the North to talk.

"Obviously any step that fragilises the global nuclear non-proliferation architecture elsewhere makes our work more difficult on DPRK," she said, referring to the North's official name of the Democratic People's Republic of Korea.

The warnings from Europe come after US Secretary of State Rex Tillerson argued that Trump's stance sent a message to North Korea that Washington would insist on a "very demanding agreement" with Pyongyang.

The leaders of France, Britain and Germany gave a rebuke to Trump in a joint statement on Friday which said the deal remained "in our shared national security interest".

Russia and China also voiced their support for the agreement.

The UN's atomic agency has repeatedly certified that Iran is sticking to its technical requirements under the accord, but Trump has insisted that the "fanatical regime" in Tehran is not living up to the "spirit" of the deal.

French Foreign Minister Jean-Yves Le Drian warned that any rupture would be "extremely damaging".

- Intense lobbying -

EU officials have already been lobbying members of Congress not to turn their backs on the accord, which was endorsed unanimously by the UN Security Council.

In a statement after Monday's talks, the EU ministers said they saw Trump's refusal to certify the deal on Friday as "being in the context of an internal US process".

The deal is working successfully to "ensure that Iran's nuclear programme remains exclusively peaceful", the ministers said.

A timeline of the 2015 Iran nuclear deal
A timeline of the 2015 Iran nuclear deal
Paz PIZZARO, AFP/File

Diplomats say that European powers share some of Trump's concerns about Iran's activities not covered by the nuclear deal -- notably its ballistic missile programme and involvement in numerous Middle East conflicts, including the war in Syria.

But they say these should be dealt with in other forums and warn it would be a calamitous mistake to sacrifice the achievement of the nuclear deal.

The EU is to dispatch its chief diplomat Federica Mogherini to Washington next month to fight for the Iran nuclear deal after US President Donald Trump threatened to tear it up.

EU foreign ministers meeting in Luxembourg on Monday joined a chorus of international support for the landmark 2015 accord, warning that Trump’s hardline stance was jeopardising efforts to find a peaceful solution to the nuclear crisis with North Korea.

Trump caused alarm across the Atlantic with a belligerent speech on Friday in which he stopped short of pulling out of the agreement but warned he could do so at any time, restating his belief that the deal was letting Iran off the hook.

He left it to the US Congress to decide whether to reimpose sanctions that were lifted in return for Tehran abandoning its nuclear ambitions.

US President Donald Trump speaks about the Iran deal from the Diplomatic Reception room of the White...

US President Donald Trump speaks about the Iran deal from the Diplomatic Reception room of the White House in Washington, DC, on October 13, 2017
Brendan SMIALOWSKI, AFP

Mogherini, the EU’s foreign policy head, said she would “be in Washington in early November” to urge US lawmakers not to pull out of the deal, known officially as the JCPOA, which was negotiated with Iran over 12 painstaking years by the US, Britain, France, China, Germany and Russia.

Ditching the deal when Tehran has repeatedly been certified as keeping up its end of the bargain by UN inspectors would send a signal to North Korea that negotiating with the international community is a waste of time, EU ministers fear.

“Clearly the ministers are concerned about the fact that messages on the JCPOA might affect negatively the possibility of opening negotiations or opening even the space for negotiations with the DPRK,” Mogherini told reporters after the bloc’s 28 foreign ministers held talks in Luxembourg.

German Foreign Minister Sigmar Gabriel said Trump’s hardline stance risked dragging the world back to a “military confrontation” with Iran.

“The threatened termination of the deal with Iran of course undermines the credibility of such international treaties,” he said.

– N.Korean army blacklisted –

The Luxembourg meeting signed off on a new package of EU sanctions aimed at punishing Pyongyang for its recent nuclear and ballistic missile tests and drying up revenue streams it needs for its weapons programmes.

North Korea’s army and armed forces ministry were both added to the sanctions blacklist, meaning any assets they hold in the EU will be frozen.

The EU hopes economic pressure will help bring the North to the bargaining table, but Mogherini said that undermining the Iran deal would make it harder to persuade the North to talk.

“Obviously any step that fragilises the global nuclear non-proliferation architecture elsewhere makes our work more difficult on DPRK,” she said, referring to the North’s official name of the Democratic People’s Republic of Korea.

The warnings from Europe come after US Secretary of State Rex Tillerson argued that Trump’s stance sent a message to North Korea that Washington would insist on a “very demanding agreement” with Pyongyang.

The leaders of France, Britain and Germany gave a rebuke to Trump in a joint statement on Friday which said the deal remained “in our shared national security interest”.

Russia and China also voiced their support for the agreement.

The UN’s atomic agency has repeatedly certified that Iran is sticking to its technical requirements under the accord, but Trump has insisted that the “fanatical regime” in Tehran is not living up to the “spirit” of the deal.

French Foreign Minister Jean-Yves Le Drian warned that any rupture would be “extremely damaging”.

– Intense lobbying –

EU officials have already been lobbying members of Congress not to turn their backs on the accord, which was endorsed unanimously by the UN Security Council.

In a statement after Monday’s talks, the EU ministers said they saw Trump’s refusal to certify the deal on Friday as “being in the context of an internal US process”.

The deal is working successfully to “ensure that Iran’s nuclear programme remains exclusively peaceful”, the ministers said.

A timeline of the 2015 Iran nuclear deal

A timeline of the 2015 Iran nuclear deal
Paz PIZZARO, AFP/File

Diplomats say that European powers share some of Trump’s concerns about Iran’s activities not covered by the nuclear deal — notably its ballistic missile programme and involvement in numerous Middle East conflicts, including the war in Syria.

But they say these should be dealt with in other forums and warn it would be a calamitous mistake to sacrifice the achievement of the nuclear deal.

AFP
Written By

With 2,400 staff representing 100 different nationalities, AFP covers the world as a leading global news agency. AFP provides fast, comprehensive and verified coverage of the issues affecting our daily lives.

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