UN Security Council votes to reimpose Iran nuclear sanctions

ANGELA WEISS / AFP

The UN Security Council voted on Friday to restore sweeping economic sanctions on Iran in response to renewed concerns over its nuclear activities, a move that drew sharp condemnation from Tehran.

Britain, France, and Germany, signatories to the 2015 nuclear accord (JCPOA), argue Iran has breached multiple commitments under the deal. The UK’s ambassador, Barbara Woodward, urged Tehran to change course while noting that diplomatic engagement could continue around next week’s UN General Assembly.

Iran’s UN representative, Amir Saeid Iravani, rejected the decision as coercive and said Tehran does not accept any obligation to implement it. Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi said he had offered European capitals a “fair and balanced” proposal intended to avert the return of penalties.

Ahead of the vote, French President Emmanuel Macron said he expected sanctions to be reimposed by the end of the month, though France’s envoy at the UN said negotiations remain possible. A letter from the three European powers in mid-August accused Iran of amassing uranium far beyond JCPOA limits and violating other provisions; despite intensive talks, they reported no breakthrough.

Israel welcomed the Security Council’s action, while Algeria, China, Pakistan, and Russia opposed it. Western governments and Israel have long warned that Iran seeks a nuclear weapons capability, an allegation Iran denies.

The 2015 pact has unraveled since the United States exited the agreement in 2018 under President Donald Trump and reinstated US sanctions. Iran subsequently expanded its nuclear program and curtailed cooperation with the International Atomic Energy Agency, especially amid heightened regional tensions and direct hostilities with Israel this year. Tehran recently pulled a draft resolution at the IAEA on protecting nuclear sites, citing US pressure.

Trump’s 2020 attempt to trigger the JCPOA’s “snapback” mechanism failed due to Washington’s earlier withdrawal from the accord. European governments maintain they have clear legal grounds to use the clause; Iran disputes that and has warned it could quit the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty if snapback proceeds.

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