Iran rejects French FM's calls for curbing its missile program
Iran has rejected French Foreign Minister Jean-Yves Le Drian’s request for curbing its missile program after a day of tense discussions in Tehran on Monday aimed at salvaging the historic nuclear deal.
Le Drian said there was “still a lot of work to do” on Iran’s missile program after meeting with top officials, including President Hassan Rouhani and Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif.
Zarif countered that Europe needed to “play a more constructive role to preserve” the nuclear deal, France24 TV Network said.
“And above all to put pressure on the United States to meet its commitments under the deal and not to allow it to present illogical and illegal demands,” Zarif added, according to an account by the foreign ministry.
The visit came in the midst of a scramble by European governments to salvage the 2015 deal after US President Donald Trump threatened he would abandon it unless tough new restrictions were placed on Iran before May 12.
Rouhani issued a statement after meeting Le Drian, saying, “Preserving the nuclear accord will prove to the world that negotiation and diplomacy are the best option for solving problems, while its collapse will signify that political negotiations are a waste of time.”
Le Drian has insisted he is not “an emissary of Trump”, but he has taken a firm line on Iran’s missile program and regional interventions that mirrors the rhetoric from Washington.
“There are programs for missiles with ranges of several thousand kilometers which are not in line with UN Security Council resolutions and go beyond what is needed to secure Iran’s borders,” Le Drian told Le Journal du Dimanche on the eve of his visit.
France has ballistic missiles with ranges of more than 6,000 kilometers, which can be launched from submarines, but Le Drian said Iran was risking fresh sanctions if it did not curb its missile program, which is currently limited to 2,000 kilometers.
His statements have not been warmly received in Iran, with Zarif telling Monday’s reformist Etemad newspaper: “In order to keep the United States in the Iran nuclear deal, European countries are suffering from extremism and this will ultimately undermine Europe’s policy.”
‘Heavy concerns on Syria’
Le Drian also pressed Iran on the activities of its ally, the Syrian government, amid the ongoing bombardment of civilians in the rebel enclave of Eastern Ghouta near Damascus.
“The Iranian authorities told me of their heavy concerns on the humanitarian situation in Syria and their desire to see an end to this catastrophe,” Le Drian told reporters.
Rouhani reemphasized Iran’s position that the only way to resolve the Syrian crisis was to “support its central government”.
But the key focus has been the 120-day deadline set by Trump in January for US lawmakers and European allies to “fix” the nuclear deal, removing “sunset clauses” that mean it expires in 2026 and reining in Iran’s missile program and regional activities.
Iran has refused any renegotiation or additional clauses, arguing that the US has already failed to keep up its end of the bargain on the existing accord.
Despite Le Drian’s tough talks on missiles, France remains firmly behind the agreement.
“We want to preserve the nuclear deal because it is working, it’s robust and because the Iranians are respecting it,” his team told AFP ahead of the visit.
The International Atomic Energy Agency has repeatedly found Iran abiding by its commitments, which curbs its nuclear program in exchange for a lifting of international sanctions.
IAEA Director General Yukiya Amano said on Monday that losing the nuclear deal “would be a great loss for nuclear verification and for multilateralism”.
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