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Withdrawing from the NPT Won’t Nullify Sanctions; Focus Needed on Eurasia Region

A Turkish expert,referring to North Korea’s experience with sanctions,stated: leaving the NPT does not nullify sanctions,and the involvement of eurasian actors in the ⁣nuclear file could be positive.

Mehr News Agency, International Desk – ⁤Azar⁢ Mahdavan: On Thursday morning, August 28, the European‌ Troika (Germany, France, and the UK), also⁣ known as the‌ three European members of the⁤ JCPOA, officially submitted a “notification” to activate the snapback⁣ mechanism for reinstating anti-Iranian sanctions to ​the UN Security Council.⁤ Despite their history of noncompliance and cooperation with their American ally, they stated conditions under‌ which they are ready to negotiate‌ with Iran within 30 days about a​ nuclear deal that could prevent sanctions ⁢from⁤ being reimposed.

The proclamation of triggering snapback-or automatic reinstatement of sanctions-is legally questionable but⁢ was naturally welcomed by⁣ the United States. Following this move, rumors have emerged about‍ Iran possibly withdrawing from the⁢ Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT).

dr. ‍Merwe Suna, professor of international relations at Kırıkkale University in Turkey, referred to Europe’s renewed push for snapback and explained it would impose stricter UN Security Council Resolution 2231 sanctions​ on Iran.​ Thes ⁤include ⁤multiple‌ economic and military‌ restrictions. The decision by E3 countries stems from negotiations France,⁢ britain, and Germany have⁣ conducted with Iran-negotiations that need more focus on military nuclear progress concerns and mutual trust rather than solely⁤ energy‍ issues.

The professor continued: after reporting this situation to the UN Security Council on August 28, several requests were made to Iran-such as granting access⁢ to UN inspectors and IAEA officials regarding nuclear activities-and​ resuming suspended talks with Washington. These demands are​ key ‌factors in preventing snapback implementation.

She added that if ‌activated, snapback cannot be vetoed-similar to previously‌ imposed UN Security Council sanctions against North Korea under international law. It is useful to recall North Korea’s withdrawal from NPT between 1990-2003; yet this did not ‍prevent enforcement of existing UNSC⁤ sanction regimes against Pyongyang.

The Turkish expert‍ emphasized that current expectations for Iran include disclosing its high-enriched uranium stockpile-if such material ⁤exists as ‌claimed-and continuing engagement with Western nations. She recalled how Iranian ⁤nuclear facilities were attacked during‌ a twelve-day conflict by U.S forces just before​ negotiations over Tehran’s nuclear program resumed between both sides.

Suna addressed implications if Iran leaves NPT: “Withdrawal does not meen complete disengagement or lack of commitment on all nuclear matters.”⁣ It does not ‌negate Tehran’s accession since 1968 nor remove ⁣oversight;⁤ future discussions about⁢ Iranian ⁢nuclear development should proceed within NPT frameworks focusing on civilian research.

The professor highlighted mediation efforts ⁣involving Eurasian players: escalating enrichment beyond three⁣ percent uranium produces significant challenges⁣ requiring negotiation processes including ⁢both ​Western‍ states ⁣and Eurasian actors alike.

She noted past attempts-for example in 2010 ⁢under Tehran agreements involving Brazil and Turkey-that sought integration between Iran and Western countries regarding its nuclear program.However,these efforts yielded no conclusive ⁢agreements due partly to negative Western responses so far. Reviving such multilateral forums might reduce tensions around Iran’s ⁢atomic dossier while mitigating harsh impacts of imposed sanctions through diplomatic means.

Full video interview with Persian subtitles

News sources: © webangah News Agency
English channel of the webangah news agency on Telegram
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