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TRUMP NUKES IRAN DEAL: Re-Imposes Economic Sanctions, ‘Horrible Deal Never Should Have Been Made’ [WATCH FULL SPEECH]


President Donald Trump announced Tuesday the U.S. will pull out of the landmark nuclear accord with Iran, declaring he was making the world safer but dealing a profound blow to allies and deepening the president’s isolation on the world stage.

“The United States does not make empty threats,” he said in a televised address from the White House.

Trump said the 2015 agreement, which included Germany, France and Britain, was a “horrible one-sided deal that should never ever have been made.” He added that the United States “will be instituting the highest level of economic sanction.”

Trump’s decision means Iran’s government must now decide whether to follow the U.S. and withdraw or try to salvage what’s left of the deal. Iranian President Hassan Rouhani said he was sending his foreign minister to the countries remaining in the accord but warned there was only a short time to negotiate with them and his country could soon “start enriching uranium more than before.”

French President Emmanuel Macron said his country, Britain and Germany all regretted Trump’s decision.

The administration said it will re-impose nuclear sanctions on Iran immediately but allow grace periods for businesses to wind down activity.

The Treasury Department said there will be “certain 90-day and 180-day wind-down periods” but didn’t specify which sanctions would fall under which timelines. Treasury says at the end of those periods, the sanctions will be in “full effect.”

National Security Adviser John Bolton said nobody should sign contracts for new business with Iran.

Saudi Arabia’s ambassador to the United States tweeted that the Kingdom, a key US ally, ‘fully supports’ the decision:

In his remarks, Trump blasted the deal as “defective at its core.” As evidence, he cited documents recently released by Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, a leading critic of the deal.

Netanyahu unveiled documents seized by Israeli intelligence showed Iran had attempted to develop a nuclear bomb in the previous decade, especially before 2003. Although he gave no explicit evidence that Iran violated the 2015 deal, he said Iran had clearly lied in the past and could not be trusted. Iran has denied ever pursuing nuclear arms

The Iran agreement, struck in 2015 by the United States, other world powers and Iran, lifted most U.S. and international sanctions against the country. In return, Iran agreed to restrictions on its nuclear program making it impossible to produce a bomb, along with rigorous inspections.

In a burst of last-minute diplomacy, punctuated by a visit by Britain’s top diplomat, the deal’s European members gave in to many of Trump’s demands, according to officials, diplomats and others briefed on the negotiations. Yet they still left convinced he was likely to re-impose sanctions.

Trump spoke with French President Emmanuel Macron and Chinese leader Xi Jinping about his decision Tuesday. The British foreign secretary traveled to Washington this week to make a last-minute pitch to the U.S. to remain in the deal, according to a senior British diplomat. The diplomat, who spoke on condition of anonymity, said the British objective will remain to uphold and maintain the deal.

Hours before the announcement, European countries met to underline their support for the agreement. Senior officials from Britain, France and Germany met in Brussels with Iran’s Deputy Foreign Minister for Political Affairs, Abbas Araghchi.

If the deal collapses, Iran would be free to resume prohibited enrichment activities, while businesses and banks doing business with Iran would have to scramble to extricate themselves or run afoul of the U.S. American officials were dusting off plans for how to sell a pullout to the public and explain its complex financial ramifications.

In Iran, many were deeply concerned about how Trump’s decision could affect the already struggling economy. In Tehran, President Hassan Rouhani sought to calm nerves, smiling as he appeared at a petroleum expo. He didn’t name Trump directly, but emphasized that Iran continued to seek “engagement with the world.”

“It is possible that we will face some problems for two or three months, but we will pass through this,” Rouhani said.

Under the most likely scenario, Trump would allow sanctions on Iran’s central bank — intended to target oil exports — to kick back in, rather than waiving them once again on Saturday, the next deadline for renewal, said individuals briefed on Trump’s deliberations. Then the administration would give those who are doing business with Iran a six-month period to wind down business and avoid breaching those sanctions.

Depending on how Trump sells it — either as an irreversible U.S. pullout, or one final chance to save it — the deal could be strengthened during those six months in a last-ditch effort to persuade Trump to change his mind. The first 15 months of Trump’s presidency have been filled with many such “last chances” for the Iran deal in which he’s punted the decision for another few months, and then another.

Even Trump’s secretary of state and the U.N. agency that monitors nuclear compliance agree that Iran, so far, has lived up to its side of the deal. But the deal’s critics, such as Israel, the Gulf Arab states and many Republicans, say it’s a giveaway to Tehran that ultimately paves the path to a nuclear-armed Iran several years in the future.

Iran, for its part, has been coy in predicting its response to a Trump withdrawal. For weeks, Iran’s foreign minister had been saying that a re-imposition of U.S. sanctions would render the deal null and void, leaving Tehran little choice but to abandon it as well. But on Monday, Rouhani said Iran could stick with it if the European Union, whose economies do far more business with Iran than the U.S., offers guarantees that Iran would keep benefiting.

For the Europeans, Trump’s withdrawal constitutes dispiriting proof that trying to appease him is futile.

Although the U.S. and Europeans made progress on ballistic missiles and inspections, there were disagreements over extending the life of the deal and how to trigger additional penalties if Iran were found violating the new restrictions, U.S. officials and European diplomats have said. The Europeans agreed to yet more concessions in the final days of negotiating ahead of Trump’s decision, the officials added.

(AP)



17 Responses

  1. No other president in US history done so much for Yiden in just 1.5 years in power. So called “Jewish” Democrats in Congress should be ashamed.

  2. I am sure some idiots on this forum (you know who you are) will blame Trump for increased tensions in ME.

  3. Now Trump should demand Iran returning $150B Hussein Obama (ymach shmo) send them in unmarked cargo planes.

  4. Trump just blew up an imperfect deal but one that kept Iran nuclear ambitions in check for the time being. There is no evidence of Iran developing nuclear weapons after the deal was signed. IDF intelligence has said that the deal has removed the nuclear threat for the time being. Trump has replaced it with nothing. He has created a wedge between the US and its allies. For all his tough talk Trump wants to pull US troops out of Syria and cede Syria to Iran. He is not ready to confront Iran militarily. His descion today is unfortunate, achieves nothing and endangers all of us right now.

  5. It’s embarrassing any Jew voted Democrat. The Dems rigged their nomination process in favor of the most corrupt politician, and against the popular candidate (Bernie), while the Republicans played by the rules and got the most atypical boat rocker. Now it’s paying off for the country and the world.

  6. I just received talking points from Obama and Kerry in my junk mailbox:
    “Trump just blew up an imperfect deal but one that kept Iran nuclear ambitions in check for the time being. There is no evidence of Iran developing nuclear weapons after the deal was signed. IDF intelligence has said that the deal has removed the nuclear threat for the time being. Trump has replaced it with nothing. He has created a wedge between the US and its allies. For all his tough talk Trump wants to pull US troops out of Syria and cede Syria to Iran. He is not ready to confront Iran militarily. His descion today is unfortunate, achieves nothing and endangers all of us right now”

  7. “Right now, the agreement, with all its faults, is working and is putting off realization of the Iranian nuclear vision by 10 to 15 years. The window of strategic opportunity is still open in our favor. If the Americans decide to withdraw from the agreement on May 12, we will have to rethink our strategic risk management” – IDF Chief of Staff Lt. Gen. Gadi Eisenkot

    But then again Moshe in Golus is obviously much smarter than the IDF Chief of Staff.

  8. “There is no question whatsoever that Saddam is seeking, is working, is advancing towards to the development of nuclear weapons,…If you take out Saddam, Saddam’s regime, I guarantee you that it will have enormous positive reverberations on the region” Bibi Netanyahu testimony to US Congress 2002.

    The warmonger was wrong before. Likely he is wrong again.

  9. people with the same mentality as crazykanoiy have Jewish blood on their hands. They would sacrifice fellow Yiden and endorse all kind of Nazi-like regimes in order not to give any credit to Trump.

  10. Shortly before Trump’s announcement, the former head of Israel’s Mossad spy agency said Iran is “fully complying with the nuclear deal.” Tamir Pardo told a security conference in the coastal town of Herzliya there “still will be a need for some kind of deal at the end of the day.” – YWN/AP.

  11. As is the case with those that realize that their arguments are weak and less than convincing Moshe in Golus resorts to silly hyperbole and name calling.

    The IDF Chief of Staff , former head of Mossad and Israeli Generals care more about Jewish blood than Donald “many fine neo-nazi marchers” Trump. It is precisely because these patriotic Israeli heros care about Jewish blood that they are wary of Trump and Bibi’s brash and brazen decisions that blow up accords but leave us with no plan “B”.

  12. The ones who actually do have “blood on their hands” are the likes of John Bolton and Bibi Netanyahu who were “100% sure” that Iraq was working to acquire nuclear weapons and were “100% sure that toppling Sadaam would have a positive ripple effect on the midfle east and labeled all those that opppsed them as “pacifist leftist” with a worldview akin to “Neville Chamberlin”. It is the Bibi/Bolton approached that caused thousands of American deaths. Tens of thousands of injuries untold suferring for thousands upon thousands of people and a colosoul waste of money and all it achieved was to give Iran the gift of a friendly Shia neighbor instead of a Sunni enemy.

  13. crazykanoiy, looks like they have unlimited internet access time in your institution, what ever this place is, accordant to your name. Arguing with crazies is a waste of time, it is more fun to ridicule folks like yourself.

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