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Tehran calls on Trump to ‘return’ to landmark nuke deal

August 24, 2018 at 4:51 am

Cartoon of President Trump ripping Iran’s Nuclear deal [Twitter]

An Iranian Foreign Ministry spokesman on Thursday called on the US to return to a landmark nuclear deal from which it withdrew earlier this year.

Speaking on Iranian state television, ministry spokesman Bahram Qasimi said that returning to the nuclear deal would be “the best option” for the US

“I hope the US views Iran – and the region in general – in a positive light and doesn’t repeat its past mistakes as the situation in the Middle East is very sensitive,” he said.

Noting that US President Donald Trump would be unable to implement all of his planned policies, Qasimi said the US had become “isolated” as a result of its decision to withdraw from the agreement.

EU countries, he said, thanks to their close ties with the US, should work to correct Trump’s Iran policy and advise him on Asia and the Middle East policymaking.

Russia and China, he added, should also work on convincing the US president to remain a party to the nuclear deal.

Read: British Airways, Air France halting flights to Iran

“What Trump must understand… is that returning to the nuclear agreement is his best option,” Qasimi asserted.

“What’s more, the US should abandon its sanctions policy, because such political manoeuvring only hurts its reputation,” he said.

In mid-2015, Iran signed a landmark nuclear deal with the P5+1 group of nations (the five permanent UN Security Council members plus Germany).

The agreement placed tight restrictions on Iran’s nuclear program in exchange for billions of dollars in sanctions relief.

Read: US not seeking regime change in Iran

In May of this year, however, Trump unilaterally withdrew the US from the agreement, which he had earlier described as the “worst deal ever”.

The move drew widespread criticism among the agreement’s other signatories.

Washington then re-imposed sanctions on Iran, which primarily target the country’s banking sector.

The sanctions are intended to hinder Tehran’s acquisition of US currency; its precious metals trade; bank transactions denominated in Iranian currency; activities related to Iran’s sovereign debt; and the country’s automotive sector.