Europeans Press Iran to Back down on Uranium Enrichment

Germany, France and
Britain pressed Iran on Wednesday to reverse a decision to start enriching
uranium to levels beyond the limits of a 2015 nuclear agreement, a move which
they said “risks compromising” chances of diplomacy with the incoming US
administration.
The foreign ministers
of the three European nations said in a joint statement that the Iranian
activity “has no credible civil justification.” They said the enrichment was a
clear violation of the 2015 deal between Iran and six world powers and “further
hollows out the agreement.”
The United States
unilaterally withdrew from the agreement in 2018, and the remaining countries
that signed it with Iran — Germany, France, Britain, China and Russia — have
been trying to keep the accord from collapsing.
On Monday, Iran began
enriching uranium to levels unseen since the 2015 deal. The decision appeared
aimed at increasing Tehran’s leverage during US President Donald Trump's waning
days in office.
Iran informed the
International Atomic Energy Agency of its plans to increase enrichment to 20%
last week. Increasing enrichment at its underground Fordow facility puts Tehran
a technical step away from weapons-grade levels of 90%.
The purpose of the
deal was to prevent Iran from developing a nuclear bomb — something Tehran
insists it doesn’t want to do. The three European powers have expressed hope
that with the change of administrations in Washington, the US might rejoin the
agreement.
President-elect Joe
Biden has said he hopes to return the US to the deal.
Complicating that
goal is that Iran — which is seeking relief from crippling US sanctions — is
now in violation of most major restrictions set out in the agreement.
The uranium
enrichment move “undermines the joint commitment” made on Dec. 21 by participants
in the deal to preserve the agreement, the European ministers said in their
statement Wednesday.
“It also risks compromising the important opportunity for a return to
diplomacy with the incoming US administration,” the statement said.
“We strongly urge Iran to stop enriching uranium to up to 20% without
delay, reverse its enrichment program to the limits agreed in the (agreement)
and to refrain from any further escalatory steps which would further reduce the
space for effective diplomacy,” the ministers added.
A decision to begin
enriching to 20% purity a decade ago nearly triggered an Israeli strike
targeting Iran's nuclear facilities. The tensions only abated with the 2015
deal, which saw Iran limit its enrichment in exchange for the lifting of
economic sanctions.
German Foreign
Minister Heiko Maas said on the sidelines of a meeting on nuclear disarmament
in Jordan that the accord still “has a chance.”
He added that the
world would know soon after Biden’s Jan. 20 inauguration what demands
Washington has.
“That’s why one can
only say once more to Iran that it would be extremely dangerous to gamble away
this chance,” Maas said.