14 Nov 2024
Friday 22 January 2021 - 08:32
Story Code : 387278

Israeli regime signals snubbing US if it rejoins Iran deal, report says

A new report cites a very senior Israeli official as saying that the occupying regime would start snubbing the US if it reentered a 2015 nuclear deal between Iran and world powers that was ditched by the previous American administration.

If Biden adopts [former US president, Barack] Obamas plan, we will have nothing to talk about with him, the regimes Channel 12 reported on Wednesday, citing the unnamed official.

Although the channel did not specify what plan the official meant, the online newspaperThe Times of Israelsaid the official was referring to the nuclear agreement, officially called the Comprehensive Joint Action Plan (JCPOA), sealed in 2015 between Iran and the 5+1 group of countries (which was then made up of the US, the UK, France, Russia and China, plus Germany).

The remarks came on the same day as Joe Biden took over the White House following the end of predecessor Donald Trumps tenure.

Trump took the US out of the deal -- that is officially known as the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action (JCPOA) -- in 2018 following widely reported provocation on the part of Israel and some of its allied regional regimes.

The former president would continually vilify the JCPOA, calling it the worst deal ever, a term that has also been used for the agreementby Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu.

Biden has suggested he could return the US to the agreement that was signed during Trump predecessor Barack Obamas tenure.

Reporting the Israeli officials remarks, the Israeli channel also warned that the new US administrations potential return to the JCPOA could lead to a crisis in Israeli-American relations.

Washington, though, is apparently trying to assure the Israeli regime and its other allies that it is in no hurry to rejoin the accord and thus risk ruffling their feathers.

On Tuesday, Bidens pick for secretary of state, Antony Blinken said during a testimony to senators that he would surely engage with Israel and its Arab allies before reentering the JCPOA,The Times of Israelcited him as saying.

Washington has also signaled seeking to subject Irans missile program and regional influence to negotiation in subsequent stages. Tehran has unequivocally rejected discussing either issue.

Blinken, however, appeared to be defending the JCPOA at the same time by acknowledging that the deal had been working. Iran only started violating it after former president Donald Trump left the agreement and imposed sanctions against Tehran, the paper added.

He was referring to a set of nuclear countermeasures that the Islamic Republic began to undertake in response to the US and some other JCPOA partners non-commitment to the deal. Tehran says the retaliatory steps are not violations butits legal right that has been enshrined in the agreement itself too.

 
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