🌹🌹🌹U.S. imposes Iran sanctions, says U.N.
penalties resume despite skepticism 🌹🌹🌹
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The United States on
Monday slapped new sanctions on Iran’s defense ministry and others involved in
its nuclear and weapons program to support the U.S. assertion that all U.N.
sanctions against Tehran are now restored, which key European allies as well as
Russia and China reject.
Iran said the new U.S. sanctions, which targeted
27 Iranian entities and people in the nuclear, missile and conventional arms
sectors, would have no effect and accused the United States of seeking
publicity.
The latest sanctions on the oil-exporting nation
include a new executive order signed by President Donald Trump targeting those
who buy or sell Iran conventional arms that was previously reported by Reuters.
U.S. Secretary of State Mike Pompeo told
reporters Washington had put new sanctions on Venezuelan President Nicolas
Maduro under the order, accusing Iran and Venezuela of having worked “to flout
the U.N. arms embargo” for nearly two years.
Under the same order, the United States also
imposed penalties on Iran’s Ministry of Defense and Armed Forces Logistics, as
well as its Defense Industries Organization and its director, Mehrdad
Akhlaghi-Ketabchi.
Others targeted under different programs include
senior Atomic Energy Organization of Iran officials as well as people
associated with its liquid propellant ballistic missile organization, Shahid
Hemmat Industrial Group.
The impetus for the U.S. action is the impending expiry of a U.N.
arms embargo on Iran and an effort to warn foreign actors that they will face
U.S. sanctions if they buy or sell arms to Iran. U.S. entities are already
barred from such trade.
Under the 2015 nuclear deal that Iran struck with six major powers
- Britain, China, France, Germany, Russia and the United States - the U.N.
conventional arms embargo is to set to expire on Oct. 18, shortly before the
Nov. 3 U.S. election.
“No matter who you are, if you violate the U.N. arms embargo on
Iran, you risk sanctions,” Pompeo told a news conference with Treasury
Secretary Steven Mnuchin, Defense Secretary Mark Esper and Robert O’Brien, the
national security adviser.
The United States, which abandoned the Iran nuclear deal in May
2018 and subsequently restored its own bilateral sanctions, says it triggered a
“snap back,” or resumption, of virtually all U.N. sanctions on Iran, including
the arms embargo, on Saturday.
The other parties to the nuclear deal and most U.N. Security
Council members have said the U.S. move has no legal effect.
“NOTHING NEW”
Iranian Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif
brushed aside the announcement as “nothing new.”
“The United States has exerted all the pressure
it could on Iran. It had hoped that these sanctions will bring our people into
their knee. It did not,” Zarif, speaking from Tehran, told a virtual meeting of
the U.S. Council on Foreign Relations.
Zarif also struck a conciliatory note by repeating that Tehran is
ready to exchange prisoners with Washington.
Elizabeth Rosenberg, a sanctions expert at the Center for a New
American Security, said that Monday’s action did not significantly “move the
needle,” either in raising pressure on Iran or in punishing those who deal with
it.
“The United States has already significantly targeted Iran, and
this new action doesn’t ... cause much more significant pain,” she said.
A senior U.S. official, speaking on condition of anonymity, on
Sunday told Reuters Iran may have enough fissile material for a nuclear weapon
by the end of the year and that Tehran has resumed long-range missile
cooperation with nuclear-armed North Korea. He did not provide evidence for
either assertion.
It was not clear whether the official meant Iran may have
sufficient low-enriched uranium (LEU) for a bomb if it were further purified.
Tehran has gradually breached its central limits in the two years
since Trump abandoned the nuclear deal, the International Atomic Energy Agency
(IAEA) says, including on its LEU stockpile and the level of purity to which it
was allowed to enrich uranium.
Asked about the U.S. official’s comment, Zarif called his
reasoning flawed and denied Iran has any intention of building a bomb because
atomic weapons would not make Iran more secure.
“Now we have about 3,000 kg which based on these analysis is
enough for three bombs already. So we do not need to wait until the end of the
year,” he said. “But we do not need to build a bomb.”
The IAEA has said Iran is still enriching uranium only up to 4.5%,
beyond the 3.67% purity limit set by the nuclear deal but well below the 20% it
achieved before the 2015 agreement, let alone the roughly 90% purity that is
considered weapons-grade.
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