• National

    Merkel Defends Nuclear Deal Even If It Isn’t Ideal

    Hassan Rouhani said on Wednesday that Donald Trump expected Tehran to leave the deal after the US withdrawal, but Tehran refused to follow that plan by trying to save the deal with its remaining signatories

    German Chancellor Angela Merkel pushed back on Wednesday against Washington’s rejection of the Iran nuclear deal, saying the accord has provided a channel of talks for western countries to pursue their concerns with Iran.

    Merkel reasserted a defense of the deal in remarks to lawmakers in the Bundestag lower house of parliament.

    “The question is whether you can talk better if you terminate an agreement or if you stay in it ... we say you can talk better if you remain in it,” she said, Reuters reported.

    “This agreement is everything other than ideal, but Iran is, according to all the knowledge of the international nuclear authorities, sticking to the commitments of the agreement.”

    Iran reiterated it would not surrender to US pressure and would resist US “plots”, following President Donald Trump’s abandonment of the 2015 agreement last week.

    Repudiating the result of more than a decade of diplomacy, Trump complained that the deal does not cover Iran’s ballistic missiles, its role in regional wars or what happens after the pact begins to expire in 2025.

    Iran says it nuclear program has only peaceful purposes and its missile program is not for negotiations.

    Trump last week announced he planned to reimpose an array of sanctions lifted by the accord, and the US Treasury on Tuesday imposed sanctions on Iran’s central bank governor, three other individuals and an Iraq-based bank.

    Iran meanwhile said the new US sanctions were an attempt to derail efforts to save the deal.

    “With such destructive measures, the American government is trying to influence the will and decision of the remaining signatories of the JCPOA (nuclear agreement),” Iranian Foreign Ministry spokesman Bahram Qasemi was quoted as saying by Fars news agency.

    Iran has described the sanctions as illegal and has warned that if talks to rescue the accord fail, it would ramp up its nuclear program to a level more advanced than before.

     US Miscalculation

    President Hassan Rouhani said on Wednesday that Trump expected Tehran to leave the deal after the US withdrawal, but Tehran had refused to follow that plan by trying to save the deal with its remaining signatories.

    “Trump played his first card, but miscalculated the second move,” Rouhani was quoted as saying by the ISNA agency.

    He also said Iran would not surrender to US pressures.

    “They think they can make the Iranian nation surrender by putting pressure on Iran, by sanctions and even threats of war... The Iranian nation will resist against the US plots,” Rouhani said.

     EU-Iran Talks Cannot Be Fruitful

    However, the top advisor to Leader of Islamic Revolution Ayatollah Seyyed Ali Khamenei said he doubted Tehran’s talks with European nations to save the deal would be successful.

    “I doubt that the talks with the Europeans will be fruitful. I hope we see good results, but ... we should be self-reliant,” Ali Akbar Velayati said, Fars news agency reported.

    European powers this week vowed to shore up the deal by trying to keep Iran’s oil and investment flowing, but admitted they would struggle to provide the guarantees Tehran seeks.

    British, French and German foreign ministers met in Brussels on Tuesday to see how they can save the nuclear deal without the United States, but appeared hard-pressed over how their companies could continue doing business with Iran once Washington begins to reimpose sanctions. Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif said his meeting with European Union officials in Brussels had been a good start, but he wanted to see guarantees materialize.

    The Europeans and Iranians have tasked experts to come up with measures quickly and will meet again in Vienna next week.

    Reuters reported on Wednesday that a senior Iranian official has met Chinese oil buyers this week to ask them to maintain imports after US sanctions kick in.