Security Council discusses US proposal to extend Iran's arms embargo
 
The UN Security Council will vote on Friday, August 14 on a
US proposal to extend the arms embargo imposed on Iran, although there is
opposition from the Russians and Chinese.
Iran breaches previous agreement
The Security Council meeting comes days after US Secretary
of State Mike Pompeo announced that Tehran is the largest state sponsor of
terrorism in the world, warning that its acquisition of weapons systems from the
Chinese Communist Party threatens regional security. US Ambassador to the UN
Kelly Craft confirmed that Russia and China want to benefit from ending the
arms embargo on Tehran and are waiting for the opportunity to sell weapons to
the mullah regime.
The ban, which came under the 2015 nuclear agreement between
Iran and Russia, China, Germany, Britain, France and the United States, is set
to expire in October. The agreement aimed at preventing Tehran from developing
nuclear weapons and also provided for easing sanctions against it. Therefore,
it is likely that the renewal of the arms embargo will lead to the collapse of
the agreement, because Iran will lose a major incentive to limit its nuclear
activities. Iranian President Hassan Rouhani had previously announced that his
country would remain in the agreement in order to obtain its benefits related
to lifting the ban on the purchase heavy weapons.
Although Iran violated parts of the nuclear agreement after
the United States withdrew from it and imposed new unilateral sanctions, the
agreement has remained alive. Former US Representative on Iran Brian Hook said,
“We must return to the UN Security Council's criteria for non-enrichment,”
which is an allusion to his country's desire for re-imposing all UN sanctions
on Tehran, which include six packages of sanctions imposed from 2006 to 2015.
US proposes ban extension
The US proposal needs at least nine votes to approve it,
without any of the five permanent member states using their right of veto,
which are France, Britain, Russia and China, along with the United States.
Iranian government spokesman Ali Rabiei threatened that his
country "will respond appropriately and firmly" if the ban is
extended.
Rabiei accused Washington of “using the UN Security Council
as a tool against the Council itself and international institutions and
pluralism,” considering that “any resolution violating Security Council
Resolution 2231 would be unacceptable and a mockery of international laws.” He
added that until the United States fully returns to the nuclear agreement and
implements all its obligations, it has no rights against the text of the
agreement and the UN resolution supporting it.
On Sunday, August 9, the secretary-general of the Gulf
Cooperation Council (GCC) sent a letter to the UN Security Council, calling to
extend the arms embargo to and from Iran “due to its continued deployment of
weapons in the region, the arming of terrorist and sectarian organizations and
movements, and its direct armed interference in neighboring countries.
Iranian Foreign Ministry spokesman Abbas Mousavi attacked
the GCC following its request to extend the arms embargo, which expires on
October 18.
          
     
                               
 
 


