by Reuters and Israel Hayom Staff
Paris pushing partners to lean on Iran over missiles
French President
Emmanuel Macron, second from left, meets Yukiya
Amano, director general
of the International Atomic Energy Agency
(IAEA), at the Elysee Palace
in Paris in October
Photo: Reuters
France said
on Wednesday it wanted an "uncompromising" dialogue with Iran about its
ballistic missile program and a possible negotiation over the issue
separate from Tehran's 2015 nuclear deal with world powers.
Paris has already suggested that
new European sanctions against Iran could be discussed over
its missile tests, something EU foreign policy chief Federica Mogherini
seemed to dismiss on Tuesday, keen not to raise risks to the hard-won
deal that curbed Iran's disputed nuclear activity.
On Sunday, Iran rejected a call by French
President Emmanuel Macron for talks on its missiles, saying they were
defensive in nature and had nothing to do with its nuclear energy work.
"France is concerned about the continued
pace of the Iranian missile program, which does not conform with [U.N.]
Security Council Resolution 2231 and which is a source of
destabilization and insecurity for the region," Foreign Ministry
spokeswoman Agnes Romatet-Espagne told reporters in a daily briefing.
Resolution 2231, which enshrined the
nuclear deal, calls on Iran not to undertake activities related
to missiles capable of delivering nuclear bombs, including launches
using such technology. It stops short of explicitly barring such
activity.
"France wishes to examine all the
diplomatic options: a frank and uncompromising political dialogue
with Iran; investigations by the U.N. General Secretariat; if necessary,
new European sanctions against Iranian entities or individuals involved
in the ballistic program; and finally opening a negotiation on the
subject," she said.
U.S. President Donald Trump, who has
resumed a confrontational U.S. approach to Iran in contrast with
predecessor Barack Obama's policy of detente, has
said Iranian missile activity should be curbed and wants to punish
Tehran over its role in Yemen and Syria.
Trump has also dealt a blow to Iran's
nuclear deal - agreed with Britain, China, France, Germany, Russia and
the United States under Obama - by decertifying Iranian compliance with
its terms, contradicting the findings of U.N. nuclear inspectors.
The U.S. Congress now has until
mid-December to decide whether to reimpose economic sanctions
on Iran that had been lifted in exchange for limiting its
nuclear program in ways meant to prevent it developing an atomic bomb.
But the EU, which normally coordinates
closely with Washington on international sanctions, has been lobbying
hard to keep the nuclear pact alive, saying it should be kept separate
from missile and regional security matters.
France's tougher line on the missile issue
appears to reflect a concern that Iran might eventually try to arm
a missile cone with a nuclear bomb, should it ever build one. Tehran has
repeatedly denied any intent to do so.
Romatet-Espagne reiterated the view that
the nuclear deal should be kept separate, but said the
ballistic missile issue was being discussed with fellow EU governments
and Mogherini's foreign service.
Foreign Minister Jean-Yves Le Drian had
been due to visit Tehran before the end of the month, although that has
now been pushed back to later in the year due to a busy schedule, a
diplomatic source said.
Any EU-wide sanctions action requires the
unanimity of all 28 member states but there is no consensus on new
punitive steps against Iran, a fact made clear by Mogherini on Monday.
"We didn't discuss, not today, not last
week [and] I don't foresee any discussion also in the future, further
sanctions from the EU side on Iran," she said, alluding to Macron's
remarks, after a meeting of EU foreign ministers.
Reuters and Israel Hayom Staff
Source: http://www.israelhayom.com/2017/11/16/despite-eu-caution-france-pursues-tough-line-on-iran-missile-program/
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