UK, France and Germany double down on their claim that Iran has nuclear ballistic missiles as defiant Tehran refuses to shelve weapons programme
- Iran rejected calls to shelve its ballistic missile programme on Thursday
- British, French and German ambassadors wrote to UN security council
- Said Iran was in breach of UN resolution underpinning the 2015 Iran nuclear deal
- Iran defiantly said it would forge ahead with its missile and space programmes
Britain, France and Germany has doubled down on their claim that Iran has nuclear ballistic missiles, prompting a defiant response from Tehran.
A letter sen by the ambassadors of the European powers to the UN Security Council accused Iran of developing missiles capable of delivering nuclear bombs.
Wednesday’s letter called on UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres to inform the Council in his next report that Iran’s missile programme was inconsistent with a UN resolution underpinning the 2015 nuclear deal reached between Iran and six world powers.
Iran responded defiantly, saying it was determined to proceed with its disputed ballistic missile programme, which it has repeatedly described as defensive in purpose and nothing to do with its nuclear activity.
An Iranian Emad rocket is launched as it is tested at an undisclosed location October 11, 2015
‘Iran is determined to resolutely continue its activities related to ballistic missiles and space launch vehicles,’ Iranian U.N. envoy Majid Takhte Ravanchi said in a letter to Guterres.
Iranian President Hassan Rouhani makes a speech during 26th National Conference on Insurance and Development in Tehran on Wednesday
Iranian Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif had earlier on Thursday denounced the European powers’ intervention.
‘Latest E3 letter to UNSG on missiles is a desperate falsehood to cover up their miserable incompetence in fulfilling bare minimum of their own #JCPOA obligations,’ Zarif tweeted, referring to the nuclear deal by its formal acronym.
He urged Britain, France and Germany not to bow to ‘U.S. bullying’.
The European letter surfaced at a time of heightened friction between Iran and the West, with Tehran rolling back its commitments under the deal step by step in response to Washington’s pullout from the pact last year and reimposition of sanctions on the Islamic Republic that has crippled its economy.
A 2015 U.N. resolution ‘called upon’ Iran to refrain for up to eight years from work on ballistic missiles that could be capable of delivering nuclear warheads.
Some states – including Russia, which with four other world powers wields a veto on the Security Council – argue that the language does not make it obligatory.
France said on Thursday that Iran’s ballistic missile activities did not conform with the Security Council resolution and called on Tehran to respect all of its obligations under that resolution.
The Security Council is due to meet on December 20 to weight the state of compliance with the resolution underpinning the nuclear deal, and the European letter ‘will add to that discussion,’ a senior European diplomat told Reuters.
Britain, France and Germany have sought to salvage the nuclear pact, under which Iran undertook to curtail its disputed uranium enrichment programme in return for relief from sanctions. But Tehran has criticised the three European powers for failing to shield Iran’s economy from the U.S. penalties.
The United States, Iran’s arch foe, and its allies in the Middle East view Tehran’s ballistic missile programme as a Middle East security threat.
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