United Nations: UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres is urging Iran to address concerns raised about its nuclear and ballistic missile programmes and return to full implementation of its 2015 nuclear deal with major powers.
The UN chief expressed regret in a report to the Security Council obtained Tuesday by The Associated Press that the Trump administration withdrew from the agreement in 2018 and re-imposed sanctions against Tehran, and at Iran's 2019 decision to violate limits in the deal including on centrifuges and enriching uranium.
Guterres said in the report on the implementation of a council resolution endorsing the 2015 nuclear agreement that for the last five years the nuclear deal has been largely viewed by the international community as a testament to the efficacy of multilateralism, diplomacy and dialogue, and success in nuclear nonproliferation".
But President Donald Trump has waged war on the nuclear agreement, denouncing it during the 2016 campaign as the worst deal ever negotiated, and he has kept up opposition in the years since the US pullout in 2018.
The Trump administration maintains the agreement the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action or JCPOA is fatally flawed because certain restrictions on Iran's nuclear activity gradually expire and will allow the country to eventually develop atomic weapons.
In August, Secretary of State Mike Pompeo formally notified the UN that it was invoking a provision of the 2015 deal to restore UN sanctions, citing significant Iranian violations and declaring: 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.
But the remaining parties to the JCPOA -- Russia, China, Britain, France and Germany --, as well as the overwhelming majority of the Security Council, called the US action illegal because the US had withdrawn from the treaty.
The council and the secretary-general both said there would be no action on the US demands -- which meant there would be no UN demand for countries to re-impose UN sanctions on Iran.
Nonetheless, concerns by the US as well as the European parties to the JCPOA have increased, especially with Iran continuing to violate the deal's limits. Iran has openly announced all its violations of the nuclear deal in advance and said they are reversible.