Election looming, Iran's Rouhani says hardliners sabotage goal to lift
sanctions
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[March 17, 2021]
DUBAI (Reuters) - Iran’s pragmatist
president accused hardline opponents on Wednesday of obstructing efforts
to lift U.S. sanctions, in remarks that demonstrate how an upcoming
election in Iran is now looming over the new U.S. administration's plan
for a thaw.
“It is a great betrayal of the Iranian nation if any faction or person
delays the end of the sanctions even for one hour,” Hassan Rouhani said
in televised remarks.
“The small minority that is obstructing this path needs to stop its
destructive act. If it stops … the government can break the sanctions,”
Rouhani added without elaborating.
The new U.S. administration of President Joe Biden aims to revive an
agreement abandoned by his predecessor Donald Trump, under which Iran
accepted curbs to its nuclear programme in return for the lifting of
international sanctions. After Trump quit the pact and reimposed
sanctions, Iran took steps that violate the deal's nuclear limits.
So far, Iran and the Biden administration are at loggerheads over which
side should move first to revive the agreement, with Tehran demanding
Washington first lift sanctions and Washington calling on Tehran first
to resume compliance with the deal.
"Today, conditions are better than ever for the lifting of the
sanctions," Rouhani said on Wednesday. The Americans, he said, are
willing to return to the deal. However, he added: "Words are not enough.
We are waiting for action."
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Iranian President Hassan Rouhani attends a meeting with Russian
President Vladimir Putin on the sidelines of a session of the
Supreme Eurasian Economic Council In Yerevan, Armenia October 1,
2019. Sputnik/Alexei Druzhinin/Kremlin via REUTERS
Rouhani's close ally Foreign Minister Javad Zarif said this week
that unless progress is made soon on restoring the nuclear deal,
diplomacy would be halted for months by Iran's presidential election
scheduled for June 18.
On Tuesday France's foreign minister blamed Iranian pre-election
politics for hindering the nuclear deal's revival.
The stalled nuclear deal has been a flagship policy for Rouhani, a
pragmatist who won landslide victories in the last two presidential
elections against hardline opponents by promising to open Iran's
economy up to the world.
Rouhani is barred from standing for a third term and the slate of
candidates has yet to be finalised.
Iran's hardliners say U.S. sanctions are proof that Rouhani's policy
of reaching out to enemies was a failure. A delay in progress on the
nuclear issue could hurt the chances of a moderate succeeding
Rouhani, although the final decision on any diplomatic initiative
would be taken by Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei rather than
the elected president.
(dubai.newsroom@thomsonreuters.com; Editing by Peter Graff)
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