25 Apr 2024
Thursday 31 August 2017 - 12:47
Story Code : 274323

France sees talks on post-Iran nuclear deal, ballistic missile use

Reuters - France suggested on Wednesday that the nuclear deal Iran struck with world powers in 2015 could be supplemented through future consultations to include the post-2025 period and tackle Irans development of ballistic missiles.


Under the deal, most international sanctions were lifted in return for Iran undertaking long-term curbs on its nuclear program, which the West suspected was aimed at developing the means to build an atomic bomb.


Iran agreed to mothball for at least a decade the majority of its centrifuges used to enrich uranium and sharply reduce its low-enriched uranium stockpile. It also agreed restrictions on its ballistic missile programs for eight years.


The President (Emmanuel Macron) on Aug. 29 indicated that the Vienna accord could be supplemented by work for the post-2025 period (and) by an indispensable work on the use of ballistic missiles, Foreign Ministry spokeswoman Agnes Romatet-Espagne told reporters at a daily briefing.


This work could be the object of future consultations with out partners, she said, referring to Macrons comments.


The United States, Britain, France and Germany have complained several times to the United Nations about Irans tests of ballistic missiles, which they contend are in defiance of a 2015 U.N. resolution enshrining the nuclear deal.


Diplomats said Macrons comments, in which he also stressed that the deal was good, came amid concerns in Paris that U.S. President Donald Trump could walk away from the nuclear accord, which he has called the worst deal ever.


Trump has ordered a review of the accord, negotiated under his predecessor Barack Obama, and allies including France fear Washington could renege on the deal in some way and risk Iranian retaliation, escalating instability in the Middle East.


The Vienna accord on Irans nuclear program is essential for regional and international security and non-proliferation, Romatet-Espagne said. There is no credible alternative.


She added that France, which has struck several multi-billion dollar deals in Iran since the 2015 agreement, neither wanted to reopen or renegotiate the accord, but to ensure it was being implemented rigorously.

Reporting by John Irish; editing by Mark Heinrich



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