Brussels sanctions: Are relations between Iran and EU destined for conflict?

In light of the Iranian prevarication regarding the nuclear
file, the European Union is imposing sanctions for the first time since 2013 on
leaders and officials in the Iranian regime, in a move that puts pressure on
Tehran to abide by the 5+1 agreement.
The expected European sanctions are related to the violation
of human rights in Iran and will include an assets freeze and a travel ban
against several personalities, whose names will be mentioned when the sanctions
are officially issued.
In the summer of 2018, several European law enforcement
agencies cooperated in thwarting a terrorist plot that included the smuggling
of explosives into Austria by an Iranian diplomat, transporting them to an
Iranian-Belgian couple in Luxembourg, who were then arrested by the Belgian
police on their way to the target in France.
The diplomat leading that plot, Asadullah Asadi, was put on
trial in Belgium last November with three conspirators, all four of whom were
convicted in February and sentenced to 20 years in prison for conspiracy to
commit a terrorist murder.
About three months before the targeting of a rally organized
by the National Council of Resistance of Iran (NCRI) in France in 2018, the
Iranian regime also attempted to detonate a truck bomb in an Albany compound
run by the main constituent group of the NCRI, the People's Mujahedin
Organization of Iran (PMOI).
About two months earlier, the regime had been struggling to
end the nationwide protests inside Iran, which Iranian leader Ali Khamenei had
directly attributed to the PMOI.
Recently, some Iranian authorities have been completely keen
on directing terrorist operations against Western officials as well as
expatriate Iranian activists, in part because the killing of late Quds Force
commander Qassem Soleimani has made their vulnerability more apparent.
The Alliance for Public Awareness, an organization
representing many Iranian communities in Europe, recently wrote a letter to European
Commission President Ursula von der Leyen and referred to the Asadi plot as
something that would have been one of the bloodiest terrorist events in
European history.
The message went on to say that much stronger European
policies are needed to tackle this crime and all of Iran's malign activities.
“We call on you to hold the mullah regime accountable for
state-sponsored terrorism, widespread human rights violations, the ballistic
missile program, as well as attempts to acquire nuclear weapons,” the letter
stated.
It added, “Make any agreement subject to the mullah regime's
commitment to end its terrorist efforts in Europe. Otherwise, we expect Europe
to cut ties with the regime and close its embassies.”