By Kevin Liptak and Nicole
Gaouette, CNN
Washington (CNN)President
Donald Trump announced Tuesday he is quitting the Iran nuclear deal, pitting
him against the United States' closest allies and leaving the future of
Tehran's nuclear ambitions in question.
"It is clear to me
that we cannot prevent an Iranian nuclear bomb under the decaying and rotten
structure of the current agreement," Trump said from the White House
Diplomatic Room. "The Iran deal is defective at its core. If we do nothing
we know exactly what will happen."
In announcing his long-telegraphed
decision, Trump said he would initiate new sanctions on the regime, crippling
the touchstone agreement negotiated by his predecessor. Trump said any country
that helps Iran obtain nuclear weapons would also be "strongly sanctioned."
"This was a horrible
one-sided deal that should have never, ever been made," the President said
in remarks that, at times, misrepresented the international agreement's
provisions. "It didn't bring calm, it didn't bring peace, and it never
will."
Trump's decision could have
explosive consequences, straining longstanding US alliances, disrupting oil
markets and boosting tensions in the Middle East, even if the US reversal
doesn't lead Iran to restart its atomic program.
While Trump supporters
praised the move, analysts and critics said it undermines Washington's
credibility in future negotiations -- particularly with North Korea -- and
potentially empowers the very hardliners in Iran that Trump vilified in his
remarks.
It also further isolates
Trump on the global stage, where he has angered even the staunchest US allies
by reneging on US commitments to the Paris climate accord and pulling out of
the Trans-Pacific Partnership trade agreement.
Former President Barack
Obama, who rarely comments on his successor, issued a statement describing
Trump's move as a "serious mistake" that could leave the US with a
"losing choice between a nuclear-armed Iran or another war in the Middle
East."
Some of the US' closest
allies, the UK, France and Germany, issued a statement expressing "regret
and concern" about the decision, emphasizing Iran's compliance with the
deal and their "continuing commitment" to the Joint Commission Plan
of Action, as the deal is formally known.
Iran's President, Hassan
Rouhani, said he had ordered the country's atomic industry to be ready to
restart industrial uranium enrichment, while the country's foreign minister
said he would work with the pact's remaining partners -- France, the UK,
Germany, China and Russia -- to see whether they could ensure "full benefits
for Iran. Outcome will determine our response," Javad Zarif tweeted.
Tensions in the region are
high, with US officials citing "concerns" that Iran might attack
Israel, without citing their evidence for the claim, while Israel called up
reserves and the State Department issued a security alert for US citizens in
the Golan Heights.
Turkish President Recep
Tayyip Erdogan told CNN that he fears that "new crises" will break
out in the Middle East as a result of the US decision.
"We don't need new
crises in the region," Erdogan told CNN's Becky Anderson.
US foes used the decision
to portray the US as an international outlier, underscoring that the US, not
Iran, is now technically in violation of the deal.
"The position
promulgated by Washington represents a significant violation of the
JCPOA," the Russian foreign ministry said in a statement, describing
Trump's decision as "new confirmation of Washington's incompetence."
The Russians also said that
US "claims regarding Iran's absolutely legitimate nuclear activities are
just a cover for keeping political scores with the country."
Indeed, senior Trump
administration officials -- including Secretary of State Mike Pompeo and the
Director of National Intelligence Daniel Coats -- have said Iran is adhering to
its commitments under the deal.
But Trump has argued while
they may be sticking to the letter of the accord, they have violated its spirit
by fostering discord in the region, supporting groups like Hezbollah, Houthi
rebels in Yemen, and the Syrian regime.
Trump derided the deal as
an embarrassment that gave the regime dollars at the same time it sponsored
terrorism.
"At the point when the
US had maximum leverage, this disastrous deal gave this regime -- and it's a
regime of great terror -- many billions of dollars, some of it in actually cash
-- a great embarrassment to me as a citizen," Trump said.
Lawmakers, such as
Pennsylvania Republican Sen. Pat Toomey, backed the decision.
"I support US
withdrawal from the flawed, dangerous Iran nuclear deal," Toomey said,
calling for the US to develop harsh new sanctions to punish Iran for "its
grotesque human rights abuses, openly hostile aggression in the Middle East,
extensive ballistic missile testing, and support for terrorism."
The sanctions could take
months to go into effect as the US government develops guidance for companies
and banks. But reapplying the sanctions -- which were lifted in exchange for
Iran's commitment to curb its nuclear program -- will effectively cripple the
2015 accord that Trump has deemed a disaster.
The grace period could
allow for further negotiations between US allies on a side agreement that
addresses Trump's concerns about the missile program and Tehran's support for
terror groups. Trump said Tuesday he was open to finding diplomatic means to address
his concerns.
But even if a deal is
struck, it's not clear how they would convince Iran to sign on, or whether
Russia and China -- two other partners to the deal -- would agree.
New US sanctions will
undoubtedly cause companies to reconsider investments in Iran and European
firms may have no choice but to scale back or risk running afoul of US rules.
Questions surrounding the
announcement also highlighted a seeming lack of strategic planning by the Trump
administration.
US officials admit that
during negotiations with European officials about a side deal to address
Trump's concerns about missiles and Iran's regional activities, they did not
discuss what they would do if the US walked away from the deal.
No Plan B
"We did not talk about
a Plan B because we were focused on negotiating a supplemental agreement,"
a senior State Department official said Tuesday, "so we did not -- we did
not talk about Plan B."
That official said the US
is prepared to sanction Europeans with the end goal of creating a "global
coalition" to work toward a comprehensive agreement that addresses all US
concerns about Iran using the leverage of economic isolation.
It's a plan that has former
officials scratching their heads.
"It's very difficult
to see how we get a better deal given that Iran would have no reason to go back
to the negotiating table and no reason to trust us," said Andrew Keller, a
former deputy assistant secretary of state for sanctions and counter threat
finance.
"Even if we were to
get the Europeans to agree to something, what is the administration's plan to
get the Russians on board, the Chinese on board, not to mention the
Iranians," Keller said. "And if there's not a plan for a new and
better deal, how can we possibly be safer outside of this one?"
The State Department
official said the administration doesn't know whether or to what degree
Europeans will be on board -- discussions with European allies began this
afternoon, the official said -- nor how Iran will react.
National security adviser
John Bolton, an Iran hawk who nonetheless told people he was committed to
providing all options to Trump, offered a variety of paths, including
reimposing all sanctions, applying new sanctions, or allowing for more time to
negotiate with the Europeans.
Trump determined that more
time would not bridge disagreements, most pointedly his demand that Iran's
nuclear program be curbed past the current deal's sunset in 2030.
Some White House officials
were caught off guard when Trump announced on Twitter Monday that he was
planning to make the announcement. Most aides expected him to wait until closer
to Saturday, when the deadline for issuing a sanctions waiver landed.
One US official suggested
the timing was moved up so as not to impede next week's opening of the US
embassy in Jerusalem, another move that could cause jitters in the Middle East.
https://edition.cnn.com/2018/05/08/politics/donald-trump-iran-deal-announcement-decision/index.html
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