by MEMRI
On October 18, 2015, the day set as Adoption Day for the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action (JCPOA), the Iranian leadership continues to come out with statements opposing Iran's approval of it.
In the past
few days, Iranian officials have clarified that Iran's Majlis, Supreme National
Security Council, and Guardian Council have not approved the JCPOA; Supreme
Leader Ali Khamenei tweeted, and posted on his Facebook page, an announcement
titled "Negotiation With America Is Forbidden"; and other Iranian
officials have stated that Iran is expecting the U.S. to announce that the
sanctions have been terminated, not suspended as the JCPOA stipulates.
Khamenei's Facebook and Twitter announcement: "For America negotiations with the Islamic Republic of Iran means penetration. This is their definition of negotiation and they want to open the way for imposition. Negotation with America is forbidden, because of its countless detriments and because of alleged advantages of which it has none whatsoever." @Khamenei_ir, October 16, 2015.
In light of
these developments, it is not clear whether Iran will officially announce its
"adoption" of the JCPOA. It is also
not clear whether the U.S. will announce its suspension of sanctions and
the E.U. will announce its termination of sanctions, as per the agreement.
The
following are statements by Iranian officials on the matter:
Guardian Council
secretary-general Ayatollah Jannati said in his October 16, 2015 Friday sermon
in Tehran: "There are those who think that approval by the Majlis means
approval of the execution of the agreement in Iran. This is not so. Majlis
approval regarding the nuclear agreement is not [approval of] its execution. The
nuclear agreement was discussed in the Supreme National Security Council and
council members expressed their opinion about it and gave their approval
regarding its execution. But Leader [Khamenei] still has not signed it. The
Majlis's work concerns the framework of the nuclear agreement, that is, it
places on the government the responsibility for carrying out the reciprocal steps
in exchange for America's steps...
"Caution should be taken, because the side that we
are facing [i.e. the U.S.] customarily
breaks its promises and does not keep them. What the P5+1 does in the matter of
executing the nuclear agreement must be examined...
"The termination of the sanctions must be taken
seriously. If they are terminated, it is a sign that the nuclear talks and
agreement have yielded results. But if the other side breaks its promises and
instead of terminating the sanctions [merely] freezes or suspends them, this
shows that the nuclear agreement was useless. Our hope is that the sanctions
will be terminated...
"If we do not stand fast against the other side, then
the next day they will say that we must officially recognize Israel, give equal
rights to men and women, cancel executions, sever relations with Hizbullah, and
so on."[1]
On
October 17, 2015, Guardian Council spokesman Nejatollah Ebrahimian said:
"The [Guardian] Council did not approve the JCPOA, but rather the Majlis
plan on the JCPOA. This means that neither the Majlis nor the Guardian Council
have approved the content of JCPOA [itself] – which constitutes neither opposition
nor agreement to the content [of the JCPOA]. The JCPOA remains a political
document, not a legal one."[2]
A few
days earlier, on October 14, 2015, Majlis speaker Ali Larijani said: "We
agreed to the negotiations because we wanted the sanctions on Iran terminated.
These negotiations became an agreement, so that the sanctions would be terminated
and the nuclear knowledge would continue and not stop... The JCPOA was examined
at various conferences, and we explicitly approved it in the Majlis. If the
other side does not terminate the sanctions, [the nuclear facility at] Natanz
will renew its activity."[3]
He also
said, on October 18, 2015: "The JCPOA was not immediately approved in the
Majlis; there was a process, and the Supreme National Security Council was
involved in this, and eventually this agreement was reached. Some opposed the
JCPOA, and some agreed to it, but the strongest opinion was to define a
framework and set conditions [for executing the JCPOA], and this opinion was
eventually accepted...
"We
have not approved the JCPOA in the way that the other side [i.e. the U.S.] has
said. We also have not said that it should be executed as is, but rather
that the JCPOA should be placed in the framework of the steps taken by the
Supreme National Security Council. Ultimately, this council's approvals are
sent for the approval of the Leader [Khamenei].
"We
felt there was a risk in the matter of the termination of the sanctions, or of
their reinstatement by the Western side on various pretexts. In this situation,
we must stop the agreement and produce 190,000 [centrifuge] SWU [Separative
Work Units] within two years. Additionally, Iran could be threatened
militarily, and in this case as well the nuclear agreement must be stopped.
"Likewise,
the inspections must be conducted according to international law, and there is
an absolute ban on inspections of military centers and national security
[sites] except with the approval of the Supreme National Security Council, [and
this requires] the ultimate approval of the Leader [Khamenei]."[4]
[1] Fars (Iran), October 16,
2015.
[2] Kayhan (Iran),
October 17, 2015.
[3] Tasnim (Iran), October 14,
2015.
[4] Tasnim (Iran), October 18,
2015.MEMRI
Source: http://www.memri.org
Copyright - Original materials copyright (c) by the authors.
1 comment:
It's been reported that the deal was never signed. It appears the US et al don't really care, as they're lifting sanctions anyway. Wow. how cool to be a terrorist rogue state and get everything you want by threats and supporting of terror. Obama you're a terrorist too.
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