United Nations:The president of the UN Security Council on Tuesday rejected the Trump administration’s demand to restore all UN sanctions on Iran, a move that drew an angry rebuke from the US ambassador who accused opponents of supporting 'terrorists'.
Indonesia’s ambassador to the UN, Dian Triansyah Djani, whose country currently holds the rotating council presidency, announced in response to requests from Russia and China to disclose results of his polling of the views of all 15 council members on the US action.
US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo insisted last Thursday that the United States has the legal right to 'snap back' UN sanctions, even though President Donald Trump pulled out of the 2015 nuclear deal between Iran and six major powers that was endorsed by the UN Security Council.
All the council members, except the Dominican Republic, had informed the council president that the US administration’s action was illegal because Trump withdrew from the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action, or JCPOA, in 2018.
Djani told members at the end of a virtual meeting on the Mideast on Tuesday that there was no general agreement among council members.
“Having contacted the members and received letters from many member countries it is clear to me that there is one member which has a particular position on the issues, while there are significant numbers of members who have contesting views," he said.
“In my view there is no consensus in the council,” Djani said. “Thus, the president is not in the position to take further action.”
That means the UN’s most powerful body, at least during Indonesia’s presidency, is not going to take up the US demand.
Niger takes over the council presidency in September, and its ambassador also sent a joint letter with South Africa, Tunisia and St. Vincent and the Grenadines calling the US 'ineligible' to trigger 'snap back' because it is not a party to the JCPOA. So it is likely to ignore the US demand as well.
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The US Mission to the UN later issued a statement saying the US “is on firm legal ground to initiate the restoration of sanctions” under the Security Council resolution that endorsed the 2015 nuclear deal.
“The fact that some council members expressed disagreement with our legal position in an informal (virtual meeting) does not have any legal effect,” the mission said.
Pompeo came to the United Nations after the Security Council resoundingly rejected a US resolution to indefinitely extend the UN arms embargo on Iran, which is set to expire October 18. Only the Dominican Republic supported the United States.
US Ambassador Kelly Craft on Tuesday repeated Pompeo’s message: “The United States will never allow the world’s largest state sponsor of terrorism to freely buy and sell planes, tanks, missiles, and other kinds of conventional weapons ... (or) to have a nuclear weapon.”
Craft accused the council of lacking 'courage and moral clarity' and accused Iran of defying the arms embargo and fomenting conflict and murder throughout the world as it supplies weapons to proxy militias and terrorist groups.