France: Iran Building Nuclear Weapons Capacity, Urgent to Revive 2015 Deal
Iran is in the process of building up its nuclear weapons capacity and it is urgent that Tehran and Washington return to a 2015 nuclear agreement, France’s foreign minister was quoted as saying in an interview published on Saturday.
Iran has been accelerating its breaches of the nuclear deal and earlier
this month started pressing ahead with plans to enrich uranium to 20% fissile
strength at its underground Fordow nuclear plant. That is the level Tehran
achieved before striking the deal with world powers to contain its disputed
nuclear ambitions.
Tehran’s breaches of the nuclear agreement since President Donald Trump
withdrew the United States from it in 2018 and subsequently imposed sanctions
on Tehran may complicate efforts by President-elect Joe Biden, who takes office
on Jan. 20, to rejoin the pact.
“The Trump administration
chose what it called the maximum pressure campaign on Iran. The result was that
this strategy only increased the risk and the threat,” Le Drian told the
Journal du Dimanche newspaper.
“This has to stop because Iran
and - I say this clearly - is in the process of acquiring nuclear (weapons)
capacity.”
Iranian Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif on Sunday dismissed Le
Drian’s claim, calling it “absurd nonsense”.
The agreement’s main aim was to extend the time Iran would need to
produce enough fissile material for a nuclear bomb, if it so chose, to at least
a year from roughly two to three months. It also lifted international sanctions
against Tehran.
Western diplomats have said Iran’s repeated breaches have already
reduced the “breakout time” to well below a year.
Iran denies any intent to weaponize its nuclear program.
With presidential elections in Iran due in June, Le Drian said it was
urgent to “tell the Iranians that this is enough” and to bring Iran and the
United States back into the accord.
Biden has said he will return the United States to the deal if Iran
resumes strict compliance with it. Iran says sanctions must be lifted before it
reverses its nuclear breaches.
However, Le Drian said that even if both sides were to return to the
deal, it would not be enough.
“Tough discussions will be
needed over ballistic proliferation and Iran’s destabilization of its neighbors
in the region,” Le Drian said.
Zarif criticized France, Germany and Britain - which remain in the deal
with China and Russia - for failing to enforce the agreement since 2018, when
Trump abandoned the deal.
“E3 leaders — who rely on
(the) signature of OFAC functionaries to carry out their obligations under
JCPOA (the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action) — have done ZILCH to maintain
JCPOA (the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action). Remember @EmmanuelMacron’s
stillborn initiative or UK non-payment of court-ordered debt? JCPOA is alive
because of Iran and not E3,” Zarif tweeted.



