Rouhani Says West Has No Right To Make Changes
![Iranian President Hassan Rouhani gives a speech in the city of Tabriz (25 April 2018)](https://ichef-1.bbci.co.uk/news/660/cpsprodpb/528D/production/_101033112_mediaitem101033105.jpg)
Iranian
President Hassan Rouhani has questioned the legitimacy of efforts by the US and
its European allies to change a nuclear deal with his country.
The US and
French leaders announced on Tuesday that they were working on a "new
deal" that would expand and extend the terms of the 2015 accord.
But Mr
Rouhani said they had no "right" to renegotiate a seven-party
agreement.
He also
dismissed US President Donald Trump as a "tradesman" not qualified to
comment on global treaties.
"You
don't have any background in politics," he said. "You don't have any
background in law. You don't have any background on international
treaties."
Mr Trump has
said the US will reimpose sanctions on Iran suspended under the deal on 12 May
unless Congress and European powers fix its "disastrous flaws".
The five
other parties to the accord - France, the UK, Germany, China and Russia - see
it as the best way to prevent Iran from developing a nuclear weapon and want Mr
Trump to continue waiving the sanctions while they try to address his concerns.
Before
holding talks with French President Emmanuel Macron at the White House on
Tuesday, Mr Trump called the deal "insane" and left it unclear what
would happen next month.
He also
warned Iranian leaders that they would "have bigger problems than they
have ever had before" if they restarted their nuclear programme.
Afterwards, Mr
Macron told a joint news conference that the deal was "not
sufficient" but gave Western powers some control over Iranian nuclear
activities.
"We
therefore wish, from now on, to work on a new deal with Iran," he said.
Based on
their discussions, Mr Macron added, it would "need to cover four
topics":
Blocking any
nuclear activity until 2025 - a period covered by the current accord
Making sure
there is no Iranian nuclear activity "in the long run"
Halting
Iran's development and testing of ballistic missiles, which Western powers say
have been taking place in violation the current deal
Generating
"a political solution to contain" Iran in the wider Middle East,
where it is directly or indirectly involved in several conflicts
Mr Trump
said:
"I think we will have a great shot at doing a much bigger maybe
deal, maybe not deal. We're going to find out, but we'll know fairly
soon." It was not clear whether Iran would have any say on the agreement
being worked on by US and European officials, but its president poured scorn on
Mr Macron's proposals in a televised speech in the city of Tabriz on Wednesday.
"Together
with a leader of a European country [the Americans] say: 'We want to decide on
an agreement reached by seven parties,'" Mr Rouhani said. "For what?
With what right?"
Mr Rouhani
also dismissed Mr Trump's "empty" threats to punish Iran if it restarted
its nuclear programme in response to sanctions being reimposed.
"We
will be taking very important steps regarding our nuclear technology," he
added. "Our activities will be very different than the past, but will be
peaceful."
"We are
not thinking about developing nuclear weapons, nor will we think about
it."
The European
Union's foreign policy chief, Federica Mogherini, meanwhile said the current
nuclear deal was working.
"On
what can happen in the future we'll see in the future, but there is one deal existing.
It's working, it needs to be preserved," she told reporters in Brussels.
Russian
presidential spokesman Dmitry Peskov said Moscow was also in favour of keeping
the deal in its current form because it believed "no alternative
exists".
FROM .bbc.com/news/world-us-canada-
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