Iranian foreign minister says U.S. sanctions on Iran’s space program ineffective

Editado por Ed Newman
2019-09-04 23:26:57

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Iranian Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif speaks during a press conference in Tehran, on August 5, 2019. (Photo by AFP)

Tehran, September 5 (RHC)-- Iran’s Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif has downplayed as “ineffective” the U.S.’s recent sanctions on the country’s space program, saying Washington’s extreme use of economic leverage will gradually threaten its own economic might.

Zarif made the remarks after a meeting with Bangladeshi Foreign Minister AK Abdul Momen in Dhaka on Wednesday.  Asked about the new U.S. bans against Iran’s civilian space agency and two of research organizations, the top Iranian diplomat said the Americans “have become addicted to sanctions” and target one government or another on a daily basis.

Such sanctions, he added, “have no effect, and the world will gradually begin to mock the United States, too.” Washington’s “use of sanctions as economic leverage has become so extreme that it will gradually pose a threat to the US economic power,” he added.

On Tuesday, the U.S. Treasury slapped sanctions on the Iran Space Agency, Iran Space Research Center and the Astronautics Research Institute.

Earlier, Iranian Minister of Information and Communications Technology Mohammad Javad Azari Jahromi took to Twitter to dismiss the sanctions.  He criticized as “regrettable” Europe’s call for the U.S.’s approval of the European measures to save the nuclear agreement.

French Foreign Minister Jean-Yves Le Drian has said Washington’s approval was cruscial for a proposed $15 billion credit lines for Iranian oil sales.  The idea is “to exchange a credit line guaranteed by oil in return for, one, a return to the JCPOA ... and two, security in the [Persian] Gulf and the opening of negotiations on regional security and a post-2025 (nuclear program). All this (pre)supposes that [US] President [Donald] Trump issues waivers,” Le Drian said on Tuesday, using an acronym for the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action, the official name of the 2015 nuclear accord.

Zarif said, “That France or the European Union need to get permission from the U.S. to take their measures is of course understandable, but regrettable from our point of view.”  The U.S. cannot legally prevent Europe from honoring its commitments under the JCPOA, he noted.


 



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