Middle East

US waives Iran nuclear sanctions

'The United States will not again waive sanctions in order to stay in the Iran nuclear deal,' US President Donald Trump said Friday (AFP)

US President Donald Trump said on Friday he would waive nuclear sanctions against Iran for the last time, to give Washington and its European allies a chance to fix the "terrible flaws" of the 2015 nuclear deal.

"This is a last chance," Trump said in a statement. "In the absence of such an agreement, the United States will not again waive sanctions in order to stay in the Iran nuclear deal. And if at any time I judge that such an agreement is not within reach, I will withdraw from the deal immediately."

A senior administration official said Trump wants the Iran deal strengthened with a follow-on agreement in 120 days or the United States will unilaterally withdraw from the international pact.

Trump had privately chafed at having to once again waive sanctions on a country he sees as a rising threat in the Middle East. The official said his action on Friday "will be the last such waiver he will issue".

While Trump approved a sanctions waiver, the treasury department decided to impose new, targeted sanctions against 14 Iranian entities and people.

Iranian Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif responded on Twitter that the deal was not renegotiable and that Trump's stance "amounts to desperate attempts to undermine a solid multilateral agreement."

Some of the new sanctions announced by the Treasury Department are a response to crackdowns on anti-government protests in Iran in which access to social media was blocked, according to a Washington Post report.

The designations include Iran’s Supreme Council of Cyberspace and its subsidiary, the National Cyberspace Center, which police the Internet, restricting access to various websites that challenge the government as well as the proxies and virtual private networks many Iranians rely on to get around the controls.

Trump had lengthy discussions on Thursday with Secretary of State Rex Tillerson, national security adviser HR McMaster and others about the deal, which was reached during the presidency of Democrat Barack Obama.

Trump will work with European partners on a follow-on agreement that enshrines certain triggers that the Iranian government cannot exceed related to ballistic missiles, said a senior administration officials who briefed reporters on the decision.

One official said Trump would be open to remaining in a modified deal if it were made permanent.

Trump also wants Congress to modify a law that reviews US participation in the nuclear deal to include "trigger points" that if violated would lead to the United States reimposing its sanctions, the official said.

This would not entail negotiations with Iran, the official added, but rather would be the result of talks between the United States and its European allies. Work already has begun on this front.

Trump has argued behind the scenes that the nuclear deal makes the United States look weak, a senior US official said. The argument for staying in was to allow time to toughen the terms of the agreements.

A decision to withhold a waiver would have effectively ended the deal that limits Iran’s nuclear program. The 2015 agreement between the United States and Iran also was signed by China, France, Russia, Britain, Germany and the European Union, and these countries would have been unlikely to join the United States in reimposing sanctions.

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