Iran, on Monday, warned the U.S. against addressing the
Islamic Republic of Iran with disrespect and threats of war.
This warning comes a day after U.S. President Donald Trump
stoked concerns about a potential U.S.-Iran conflict.
But in a sign of brewing confrontation a year after
Washington quit world powers’ 2015 nuclear deal with Iran and reimposed
sanctions on it, Tehran announced a fourfold increase in its rate of low-grade
uranium enrichment, NAN reports.
Tensions between Washington and its Sunni Muslim Gulf Arab
allies on one side and Tehran and its Shi’ite Muslim proxies in the region on
the other have been flaring for weeks.
On Sunday, Trump tweeted: “If Iran wants to fight, that will
be the official end of Iran. Never threaten the U.S. again!”
Iranian Foreign Minister, Mohammad Zarif replied on his
Twitter account “Never Threaten An Iranian. Try respect—it works!”
Zarif, who was educated in the U.S. actually praised Trump
for earlier remarks seen as cautioning hawks in his administration, who were
encouraging conflict.
The President “rightly deplores ‘military-industrial
complex’ pushing U.S. #ForeverWars,” Zarif wrote on Twitter.
But he said Trump had allowed a “B-team” of aides led by
National Security Advisor John Bolton to “trash diplomacy”.
He accused them of “milking despotic butchers via massive
arms sales”, an apparent reference to Iran’s main regional foe, Saudi Arabia,
Washington’s biggest arms buyer.
Trump has tightened economic sanctions against Iran, and his
administration says it has built up the U.S. military presence in the region.
It accuses Iran of posing threats to U.S. troops and
interests. Tehran has denied this, describing U.S. moves as “psychological
warfare” and a “political game”.
Britain told Iran on Monday not to underestimate the resolve
of the U.S., warning that if American interests were attacked then the Trump
administration would retaliate.
The foreign minister of Oman, a Gulf Arab state that in the
past helped pave the way for negotiations between Iran and the U.S., visited
Tehran on Monday.
Yousuf bin Abdullah addressed regional and international
issues with Zarif, Iranian state news agency IRNA said, without elaborating.
Quoting an official at the Natanz enrichment plant, the
semi-official Tasnim said Iran was accelerating the rate at which it refines
uranium to 3.67 per cent fissile purity, suitable for civilian nuclear power
generation.
The move came two weeks after Iran, acting after Trump
reimposed sanctions aimed at blocking all Iranian oil exports to cripple its
economy, declared it would scale back some commitments under the accord it
signed with six world powers.
Under the 2015 deal, the Islamic Republic was allowed to
stockpile a maximum of 300 kg of low-enriched uranium, and ship any excess out
of the country for storage or sale.
Iran said this month that cap no longer applied in response
to the unilateral U.S. withdrawal from the deal.
Trump has condemned the accord, signed by his predecessor
Barack Obama, as flawed for not being permanent and for not covering Iran’s
ballistic missile programme and role in conflicts around the Middle East.
Behrouz Kamalvandi, spokesman for the Atomic Energy
Organisation of Iran, told Tasnim that the UN atomic watchdog, the
International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA), had been notified about the move to
step up the enrichment rate fourfold.
“It won’t be long until we pass the 300-kg limit of low
enriched uranium. So it’s better for the other side to do what it’s necessary
to be done,” Kamalvandi said, alluding to steps by other powers to shield Iran’s
economy from U.S. sanctions.
He said the acceleration of Iran’s centrifuge enrichment
machines remained within the bounds of the nuclear deal, and Tehran had no
intention to exit the accord.
It was not clear how far Iran’s current stock of low-enriched
uranium was from the 300-kg limit.
Under the deal, Iran may enrich uranium to 3.67 per cent
purity – far below the 90 per cent of weapons-grade, and also below the 20 per
cent level to which Iran refined uranium before the deal.
Iran has threatened that in 60 days it would resume
enrichment beyond the 3.67 per cent level unless remaining signatories of the
deal – Russia, China, Britain, France and Germany – find a way to safeguard its
vital oil and banking sectors.
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