The U.N. Security
Council on Monday backed Iran's nuclear agreement with world powers but
the Islamic Republic's Revolutionary Guards attacked the resolution,
underlining powerful opposition to the deal. U.S.
President Barack Obama, who also faces domestic political opposition to
the agreement, hailed the United Nations endorsement, saying it showed
last week's accord commanded broad international support as the best way
of ensuring Iran never gets nuclear weapons. The
European Union also approved the deal, which curbs Iran's nuclear
program in return for easing economic sanctions, while Germany rapidly
moved to revive its once close trading relationship with Tehran. EU
foreign ministers, inspired by the diplomacy that led to the nuclear
pact, agreed to try and involve more countries in restarting peace talks
between Israel and the Palestinians. At
the United Nations, the Security Council unanimously adopted a
resolution that was negotiated as part of the agreement reached in
Vienna between Iran and the six powers. In
return for lifting the U.S., EU and U.N. sanctions that have crippled
its economy, Iran must accept long-term limits on the nuclear program
that the West suspected was aimed at creating an atomic bomb, but which
Tehran says is peaceful. The
White House said several cabinet members would give two classified
briefings to lawmakers in Congress on Wednesday and it welcomed a letter
signed by 60 national security experts approving the deal. While
the Democratic Party leader in the U.S. House of Representatives, Nancy
Pelosi, wrote to colleagues backing the nuclear agreement,
congressional Republicans, who control both chambers of Congress, railed
against the U.N. vote. Several called it an "affront to the American
people" because it took place before the end of the congressional review
period. Congress has 60 days to decide whether to approve or reject the deal. The
agreement also faces opposition in some Middle East states, including
Israel and Saudi Arabia. Israel warned U.S. Defense Secretary Ash Carter
on his visit to Israel on Monday that it feared the pact would
translate into more money for Hezbollah, an Iranian-backed Lebanese
militia group, and others hostile to Israel. Even
before the Council passed the resolution in New York, top Iran
Revolutionary Guards commander Mohammed Ali Jafari denounced it for
interfering with Iran's military operations and crossing "red lines" set
by Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei. "We will never accept it," he was quoted as saying by the semi-official Tasnim News Agency. Iranian
hardliners are worried that U.N. inspectors may gain some access to
sensitive military sites under the resolution, which becomes
international law. The
country’s senior nuclear negotiator, Seyed Abbas Araghchi, dismissed
critics' concerns and called the resolution an "unprecedented
achievement in Iran’s history". The deal must be approved by Iran's
National Security Council and later by Khamenei. Parliament's role is
not clear. SIGNAL TO CONGRESS The
EU's approval of the deal with the United States, China, Russia,
Britain, France and Germany marked a first step toward lifting Europe's
economic sanctions against Tehran. The bloc hopes this will send a
signal that the U.S. Congress will follow. In
a message mainly aimed at skeptical voices in Congress and strong
resistance from Israel, EU foreign ministers meeting in Brussels
stressed that there was no better option available. "It is a balanced deal that means Iran won't get an atomic bomb," said French Foreign Minister Laurent Fabius. Samantha
Power, the U.S. ambassador to the United Nations, appeared to try to
address some of the concerns shared by congressional conservatives and
some in the Middle East. The deal "doesn't change our profound concern
about human rights violations committed by the Iranian government or
about instability Iran fuels ... from its support for terrorist proxies
to its repeated threats against Israel, its other destabilizing
activities in the region", she said. Iran's
U.N. Ambassador, Gholamali Khoshroo, rejected the U.S. accusations as
baseless. "The country that invaded two countries in our region and
created favorable grounds for the growth of terrorism and extremism is
not well placed to raise such accusations against my country," he told
the Council. Passage of
the U.N. resolution triggers a complex set of coordinated steps agreed
by Iran during nearly two years of talks with the powers. It
says that no sanctions relief will be implemented until the
International Atomic Energy Agency submits a report to the Council
verifying that Iran has taken certain nuclear-related measures outlined
in the agreement. Under
the deal, the major powers which signed the accord don't need to take
any further action for 90 days. Then they are required to begin
preparations so they are able to lift sanctions as soon as the IAEA
verification report is submitted. KEEN TO DO BUSINESS Some
countries are already keen to do business with the oil exporter.
Germany and Iran moved tentatively on Monday toward reviving trade,
anticipating the lifting of the sanctions. Economy
Minister Sigmar Gabriel, making the first top level German government
visit to Tehran in 13 years, indicated that a ministerial-level meeting
of a long dormant German-Iran economic commission would take place early
next year in Tehran. For
decades, Germany was Iran's biggest trading partner in Europe. German
exports there hit 4.4 billion euros in 2005 but then slumped to 1.8
billion by 2013 as the West tightened the sanctions. The
trip is a delicate one for Gabriel, who is also Vice Chancellor, partly
because of Germany's close ties to Israel, Iran's sworn enemy. Gabriel
said better economic ties depended on Iran improving relations with
Israel. "For us Germans, Israel's security is of great importance," he
told a news conference. At
the same news conference, Iranian Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif
did not touch on the issue of Israel directly, but said: "Of course we
have differing political views. But we can talk about these differences
of opinion."
U.N. Council backs Iran nuclear deal but Tehran hardliners object
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Reuters
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