Wednesday , July 23 2025

Iran says it will respond to re-imposition of UN sanctions

23-07-2025

TEHRAN: Iran could withhold security commitments if European states invoke a UN mechanism to re-impose international sanctions on the Islamic Republic, a member of Iran’s parliamentary national security commission said on Monday, according to Borna news.

“We have many tools in our disposition. We can withhold our commitment to security in the region, Persian Gulf and Hormuz Strait as well as other maritime areas,” Abbas Moqtadaei said in reference to Tehran’s potential counter-measures to the re-imposition of international sanctions.

He was speaking ahead of a meeting on Friday between Iranian deputy foreign ministers and British, French and German diplomats in Istanbul.

The three European states, known as E3, have said they would restore international sanctions on Iran by the end of August if the country did not enter productive talks on its nuclear program with Western powers, notably the United States.

E3 countries and Iran have in recent months held inconclusive talks on Tehran’s nuclear program, in parallel to indirect nuclear negotiations between Tehran and Washington. Israel’s attack on Iran in June led to the suspension of such talks.

“Europe is not in a position to endanger itself in the… Hormuz Strait when it is itself in political, economic and cultural conflicts with Russia, China and even the United States,” Moqtadaei said in an interview with Iran’s semi-official Borna news agency.

Last week, Iran’s foreign ministry spokesperson said Tehran would react to the three European states if they invoked the UN snapback mechanism, which expires on October 18.

In a letter to the UN Secretary-General, Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araqchi said on Sunday that the E3 lack the legal standing to invoke the mechanism, arguing that their stance on Israeli and US strikes on Iran’s nuclear facilities last month made them no longer participants to a 2015 nuclear deal to which the snapback mechanism is linked.

The three European countries, along with China and Russia, are the remaining parties to the nuclear pact, from which the US withdrew in 2018 that lifted sanctions on Iran in return for restrictions on its nuclear program.

In the past, Iran has used the threat of disrupting maritime transit in the Strait of Hormuz or no longer stopping Europe-bound drug trafficking as a means to push back against Western pressures on its nuclear program.

Iran said it will hold talks with Russia and China on Tuesday in an attempt to circumvent UN snapback sanctions as the deadline for a nuclear agreement looms.

“We are in constant consultation with these two countries to prevent activation of the snapback or to mitigate its consequences,” Foreign Ministry spokesman Esmail Baghaei said during a Monday press briefing, reported Iran International. “We have aligned positions and good relations.”

Both China and Russia are signatories of the 2015 Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action (JCPOA), an agreement that seemingly failed to end Iran’s nuclear ambitions following the US withdrawal from the deal under the first Trump presidency in 2018 and the subsequent nuclear advances Tehran made.

The news of the impending meeting comes one week after France, Germany and the UK announced they would enforce snapback sanctions on Tehran if it fails to enter into a new nuclear agreement by the end of August.

What would need to be included in a new nuclear deal remains unclear and Iran has not yet renewed nuclear negotiations with the US after Washington levied significant strikes against its top atomic facilities last month in coordination with Israel. (Int’l News Desk)

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