Britain, France, Germany formally accuse Iran of breaking nuclear deal

PARIS/LONDON: Britain, France and Germany formally accused Iran yesterday (Jan 14) of violating the terms of its 2015 agreement to curb its nuclear programme, which eventually could lead to the reimposing of UN sanctions lifted under the deal.

The European powers said they were acting to avoid a crisis over nuclear proliferation adding to an escalating confrontation in the Middle East. Russia, another signatory to the pact, said it saw no grounds to trigger the mechanism and Iran dismissed the step as a “strategic mistake.”

The three countries said they still wanted the nuclear deal with Tehran to succeed and were not joining a “maximum pressure” campaign by the US President Donald Trump’s administration, which abandoned the pact in 2018 and has reimposed economic sanctions on Iran.

The countries triggered the deal’s “dispute mechanism,” which amounts to formally accusing Iran of violating the terms of the agreement.

Iran’s foreign minister criticised the move.

“The usage of the dispute mechanism is legally baseless and a strategic mistake from a political standpoint,” Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif said, according to the Fars news agency.

Iran, which denies its nuclear programme is aimed at building a bomb, has gradually rolled back its commitments under the accord since the United States quit. It argues that Washington’s actions justify such a course.

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