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RUSSIA AND CHINA have started making the case at the United Nations against
Washington’s claim that it can trigger a return of all sanctions on Iran at the
Security Council, with Moscow invoking a 50-year-old international legal
opinion to argue against the move.
Reuters reported Russian Foreign Minister
Sergey Lavrov and the Chinese government’s top diplomat, Wang Yi, both wrote to
the 15-member council and UN chief, Antonio Guterres as the United States threatens
to spark a so-called sanctions snapback under the Iran nuclear deal, even though Washington quit the
accord in 2018.
Lavrov wrote in the May 27 letter, made public this week, that
the United States was being “ridiculous and irresponsible”, adding:
“This is absolutely unacceptable and serves only to recall the
famous English proverb about having one’s cake and eating it.”
Washington has threatened to trigger a return of UN sanctions on
Iran if the Security Council does not extend an arms embargo due to expire in
October under Tehran’s deal with world powers to prevent it from developing
nuclear weapons.
US Ambassador to the UN Kelly Craft said last week that a draft
resolution on the embargo would be circulated soon.
Council veto-powers Russia and China have already signaled they
are against re-imposing an arms embargo on Iran. If they block the US-drafted
resolution, then Washington will have to follow through on its sanctions
snapback threat.
“The United States, no longer a participant to the JCPOA
(nuclear deal) after walking away from it, has no right to demand the Security
Council invoke a snapback,” Wang wrote in his June 7 letter.
The 2015 Iran nuclear deal, enshrined in a UN resolution, allows
for return of sanctions on Iran, including the arms embargo, if Iran violates
the deal. US President Donald Trump quit the deal in 2018, branding the accord
from Barack Obama’s presidency as “the worst deal ever.”
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