On Sept. 27, the UN reimposed economic/military sanctions on Iran, after European powers failed to reach a deal that would re-engage Iran in diplomacy with the US and allow IAEA inspectors access to the country’s nuclear facilities.
- The sanctions enact travel bans/asset freezes on Iranian entities/officials, authorise cargo inspections on Iranian ships/planes, reinstate an arms embargo, and prohibit Iran from enriching uranium and testing nuclear-capable ballistic missiles. Much of the economic pain will be softened by continued oil trade with China and military ties with Russia.
- The E3 said, “The reimposition of UN sanctions is not the end of diplomacy. We urge Iran to refrain from any escalatory action and to return to compliance with its legally binding safeguards obligations.” US Secretary of State Marco Rubio said, “Trump has been clear that diplomacy is still an option… For that to happen, Iran must accept direct talks, held in good faith...”
- Iranian President Masoud Pezeshkian said “[the US] want[s] us to give them all of our enriched uranium in exchange for giving us a three-month period… In a few months, they will raise another demand... We will choose the snapback.”
- The snapback is likely to increase insecurity in the region, with Tehran pledging to rebuild nuclear facilities damaged by Israeli-US airstrikes and hardliners in the Iranian government calling for changes to the country’s nuclear doctrine and threatening to withdraw from the NPT. Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu told UNGA on Friday, “We must not allow Iran to rebuild its military nuclear capacities. Iran’s stockpile of enriched uranium, these stockpiles must be eliminated.”