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Iran tells US to 'stop dreaming' of extended arms embargo by Staff Writers Tehran (AFP) April 27, 2020 Tehran on Monday told Washington to "stop dreaming" after it was reported that the US plans to prevent the expiry of an international embargo on arms sales to Iran. The New York Times reported that US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo "is preparing a legal argument that the United States remains a participant in the Iran nuclear deal that President (Donald) Trump has renounced". The move was "part of an intricate strategy to pressure the United Nations Security Council to extend an arms embargo on Tehran or see far more stringent sanctions reimposed" on the Islamic republic, it added. Decades-old tensions between Tehran and Washington escalated in 2018 when Trump unilaterally withdrew from the Iran nuclear deal -- the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action, or JCPOA -- and reimposed sanctions as part of a campaign of "maximum pressure". Iran's top diplomat Mohammad Javad Zarif responded on Twitter to Pompeo's reported plan to extend the arms embargo. Zarif wrote on Monday that two years ago Pompeo and "his boss declared 'CEASING US participation' in JCPOA, dreaming that their 'max pressure' would bring Iran to its knees. "Given that policy's abject failure, he now wants to be JCPOA participant," Zarif said. "Stop dreaming: Iranian Nation always decides its destiny," the foreign minister added. The JCPOA was agreed in 2015 between Iran and six world powers -- Britain, China, France, Germany, Russia and the United States. It gave the Islamic republic relief from international sanctions in return for limits on its nuclear programme. In response to the US pullout, Iran has gradually rolled back its commitments to the JCPOA, which it says is in accordance with the agreement. Washington, which accuses Tehran of violating the agreement, wants to prevent the lifting of an arms embargo that is due to expire in October under UN Security Council Resolution 2231 -- the same 2015 resolution that formalised the JCPOA. The New York Times said the US was planning to achieve its goal through a new resolution that would bar countries from exporting arms to Iran. But it added that in order to force the issue Pompeo had approved a plan under which the US would claim it legally remains a "participant state" in the nuclear accord. Iran, for its part, accuses the United States of violating Resolution 2231 by withdrawing from the nuclear accord. mj/dv/dwo
Guards say Iran successfully launches first military satellite Tehran (AFP) April 22, 2020 Iran's Revolutionary Guards announced they had successfully launched the country's first military satellite on Wednesday, a programme that the US alleges is a cover for its missile development. "The first satellite of the Islamic Republic of Iran has been successfully launched into orbit by the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps," said the Guards' Sepahnews website. It said the satellite - dubbed the Nour - had been launched from the Qassed two-stage launcher from the Markazi desert, a vast exp ... read more
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