The U.S. will
not extend waivers on sanctions targeting Iran’s nuclear program, effectively
ending its compliance with the 2015 international agreement under which Iran
accepted restrictions on its nuclear program in exchange for economic relief.
“I am
announcing today that the U.S. will withdraw from the Iran nuclear deal,” Trump
said at the White House. “We will be instituting the highest level of economic
sanctions.”
Trump accused
the deal ― officially called the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action (JCPOA) ―
of being poorly negotiated and lacking enforcement mechanisms. He said it
allows Iran to develop a nuclear weapon in a short time, but offered no
evidence to back these assertions. Trump also cited Israeli Prime Minister
Benjamin Netanyahu’s April 30 presentation on Iran’s nuclear program, which
alleged that Iran lied about its past nuclear activities before negotiating the
nuclear deal.
“At the heart
of the Iran deal was a giant fiction: that a murderous regime desired only a
peaceful nuclear energy program. Today, we have definitive proof that this
Iranian promise was a lie,” Trump said.
Nuclear
experts and European officials criticized Netanyahu’s speech for pandering to
Trump and offering essentially no new information on Iran’s nuclear activities.
Much of Netanyahu’s presentation centered on information that was publicly
available in a 2007 declassified intelligence report, and Netanyahu did not
state that Iran was in current violation of the deal.
European
officials, who pushed for Trump to uphold the deal, condemned the president’s
decision to pull out. French President Emmanuel Macron tweeted shortly after
Trump’s speech that France, Germany and the United Kingdom regret the U.S.
decision and that “we will work collectively on a broader framework.” The
European Union’s top diplomat Federica Mogherini said that the deal was working
and fulfilling its promise.
Former
President Barack Obama, who touted the Iran deal as one of his chief foreign
policy accomplishments, put out a statement criticizing Trump’s decision to
undo the agreement.
“Walking away
from the JCPOA turns our back on America’s closest allies, and an agreement
that our country’s leading diplomats, scientists, and intelligence
professionals negotiated,” Obama said.
It is not immediately
clear what will happen next. The 2015 nuclear agreement was negotiated among
Iran, the U.S. and five other countries — the U.K, France, Germany, China and
Russia ― which urged the U.S. not to withdraw. Last month, Iranian Foreign
Minister Javad Zarif suggested that if the U.S. pulled out of the nuclear
accord, his country could also exit the deal and resume its nuclear program at
a “much greater speed.” Iran has no reason to continue to abide by the
agreement if the economic benefits “start to diminish,” he said.
But most of
the economic benefits Iran receives through the nuclear deal do not come
directly from the U.S., which maintains a primary embargo against Iran. When
Trump previously waived sanctions, he suspended secondary sanctions, which
penalize other countries for doing business with Iran.
“If you take
away U.S. sanctions relief, you are taking away probably the most powerful
incentive the Iranians had to do their part,” said Richard Nephew, a former
State Department official who worked on Iran sanctions policy.
When Trump
threatened to pull out of the nuclear agreement last year, the European Union’s
ambassador to the U.S., David O’Sullivan, warned that the EU could invoke a
blocking statute that would protect European businesses from U.S. secondary
sanctions. Theoretically, this means that Iran could continue receiving
economic benefits under the 2015 deal and would be compelled to maintain the
restrictions on its nuclear program.
But
implementing this blocking mechanism or other steps to preserve the deal would
be technically difficult and diplomatically risky for European countries.
“It’s going
to be a herculean task,” said Reza Marashi, a National Iranian American Council
analyst and former State Department official who just returned from two weeks
of meeting with officials and experts in Europe.
“The real
meat on the bones would take at least a year to implement, and they have no
plan for anything ... they’ve spent most of their energy trying to figure out a
way for Trump to stay in.”
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