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Hassan Rouhani in parliament on Tuesday. ‘We will return to our previous situation very much stronger.’
Hassan Rouhani in parliament on Tuesday. ‘We will return to our previous situation very much stronger.’ Photograph: Vahid Salemi/AP
Hassan Rouhani in parliament on Tuesday. ‘We will return to our previous situation very much stronger.’ Photograph: Vahid Salemi/AP

Iran says it could quit nuclear deal if US keeps adding sanctions

This article is more than 6 years old

President Hassan Rouhani says Trump has shown the world that Washington is ‘not a good partner’

The Iranian president, Hassan Rouhani, has warned that his country could abandon its 2015 nuclear deal with world powers within hours if the United States keeps on imposing new sanctions.

In a speech to parliament outlining plans for his new term, Rouhani also hit out at his US counterpart Donald Trump, saying he had shown the world that Washington was “not a good partner”.

Rouhani’s comments come with the nuclear deal under mounting pressure after Tehran carried out missile tests and strikes, and Washington imposed new sanctions – with each accusing the other of violating the spirit of the agreement.

Rouhani warned that Iran was ready to walk out of the deal – which saw the lifting of most international sanctions in return for curbs on its nuclear programme – if Washington persisted.

“Those who try to return to the language of threats and sanctions are prisoners of their past delusions,” he said in the televised address.

“If they want to go back to that experience, definitely in a short time – not weeks or months, but in the scale of hours and days – we will return to our previous situation very much stronger.”

He said Iran did prefer to stick with the nuclear deal, which he called “a model of victory for peace and diplomacy over war and unilateralism” but that this was not the “only option”.

Rouhani said Trump had shown he was an unreliable partner not just for Iran but for US allies as well.

“In recent months, the world has witnessed that the US, in addition to its constant and repetitive breaking of its promises in the JCPOA [the nuclear deal, officially called the joint comprehensive plan of action], has ignored several other global agreements and shown its allies that the US is neither a good partner nor a reliable negotiating party,” he said.

He highlighted Trump’s decisions to withdraw from the Paris climate agreement and international trade deals.

Washington’s United Nations envoy Nikki Haley said in a statement: “Iran cannot be allowed to use the nuclear deal to hold the world hostage. Iran, under no circumstances, can ever be allowed to have nuclear weapons... The nuclear deal must not become ’too big to fail.’”

US state department spokeswoman Heather Nauert said Washington was in full compliance with its side of the deal.

But she confirmed the US administration was reviewing its policy toward Iran and that it believes the nuclear deal did not put an end to Tehran’s other “destabilising activities” in its region.

On Sunday, Iran’s parliament approved more than half a billion dollars in funding for the country’s missile programme and foreign operations of the elite Revolutionary Guards in response to the new US sanctions.

In talks with the Russian president, Vladimir Putin, Rouhani vowed to build on their joint military efforts across the region.

“Tehran welcomes the active presence of Russia’s investors ... in major infrastructure projects including in the fields of industry and energy,” his office said.

Rouhani was addressing lawmakers as deliberations start over his new ministerial lineup, which must be approved by lawmakers in the coming days.

The president started his second term a fortnight ago under fire from reformists over his elderly and all-male cabinet.

“I wanted to nominate three women ministers but it did not happen,” he said, without explaining why.

“All ministers must use women in high-ranking positions... and especially female advisers and deputies.”

Rouhani, a 68-year-old moderate cleric, won a resounding re-election victory in May in large part due to the backing of reformists who supported his message of greater civil liberties and equality.

Many felt let down by the lack of women ministers, saying he had bowed to pressure from the conservative religious establishment, although he did appoint two female vice presidents and a senior aide – positions that do not require parliamentary approval.

He defended his cabinet selections on Tuesday, and pointed to his pick for telecoms minister, 35-year-old Mohammad Javad Azari Jahromi, as “our first experience in choosing from the youth, someone who has grown up after the revolution.”

Rouhani promised a more targeted approach to social welfare and job creation, responding to attacks during the campaign that his neoliberal agenda was mostly benefiting the rich.

He promised to eradicate absolute poverty and improve the conditions of the poorest “by five times” by the end of his term in 2021.

“The government is determined to carry out structural reforms. It sees the all-out fight against corruption as an absolute prerequisite for progress and social justice,” he said.

He also detailed a range of economic challenges, particularly the need to clean up the banking system, which is riven with toxic debt, and reform taxation to end the country’s reliance on unstable oil revenues.

More on this story

More on this story

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  • Iran-US tensions are reaching new heights – and neither is likely to blink

  • Iran’s supreme leader dismisses Trump's 'rants and whoppers'

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  • EU urges US Congress to preserve Iran nuclear deal Trump threatened

  • Iran will not renegotiate nuclear deal, says Rouhani - video

  • Trump risks making US rogue actor as he condemns Iran nuclear deal

  • Trump threatens to rip up Iran nuclear deal unless US and allies fix 'serious flaws'

  • The Guardian view on decertifying the Iran deal: full of sound and fury

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