US has reimposed UN sanctions on Iran
Secretary of State Mike Pompeo said Saturday evening
that the US has reimposed UN sanctions against Iran, a move expected to be
effectively ignored by global allies and adversaries alike.
The latest move is the latest in the "maximum
pressure" campaign against Tehran -- one that has left the US largely
isolated. It comes after the administration failed to extend the conventional
weapons embargo set to expire next month under the Iran nuclear deal.
"The United States expects all UN Member States
to fully comply with their obligations to implement these measures. In addition
to the arms embargo, this includes restrictions such as the ban on Iran
engaging in enrichment and reprocessing-related activities, the prohibition on
ballistic missile testing and development by Iran, and sanctions on the
transfer of nuclear- and missile-related technologies to Iran, among others. If
UN Member States fail to fulfill their obligations to implement these
sanctions, the United States is prepared to use our domestic authorities to
impose consequences for those failures and ensure that Iran does not reap the
benefits of UN-prohibited activity," Pompeo said in a statement.
Other countries have rejected the US' argument that
it could reimpose the UN sanctions that had been lifted under the Iran nuclear
deal as the Trump administration withdrew from the deal in 2018. They are not
expected to recognize the snapback sanctions.
"In the coming days, the United States will
announce a range of additional measures to strengthen implementation of UN
sanctions and hold violators accountable," Pompeo said without providing
additional details on those measures.
In a letter to the UN Security Council and to the UN
Secretary-General, Iran urged the Council to block any attempt by the US to
reimpose international sanctions.
"Given that the stated objective of the United
States is to completely ruin the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action and to that
end, its strategy is to create legal complication through presenting unilateral
arbitrary interpretations and pseudo-legal arguments, the Islamic Republic of
Iran trusts that the members of the Security Council will, once again, reject
the United States' continued attempt to abuse the Security Council's process,
thus undermining the authority and credibility of the Council and the United
Nations," UN Iranian Ambassador Majid Takht Ravanchi said in the letter.
He also responded to the news on Twitter, saying
that "UNSC member states continue to maintain US is NOT a JCPOA
participant, so its claim of "snapback" is null & void."
"US is STILL in violation of JCPOA and Res
2231—swimming against int'l currents will only bring it more isolation,"
he tweeted.
In a tweet Sunday, Iranian Foreign Minister Javad
Zarif said while the "world says NO Security Council sanctions were
restored," Pompeo "threatens to punish a world that refuses to live
in his parallel universe." He added that President Donald Trump should
change tack before Pompeo "further turns (Make America Great Again) into a
global laughing stock."
Experts have told CNN that this unilateral effort --
which comes less than two months before the presidential election -- is unlikely
to have an impact on arms sales on its own. Some say the move further alienates
the US from its E3 allies -- Germany, France and the United Kingdom -- and
serves to further undercut the 2015 Iran nuclear agreement.



