Iran warned not to degenerate after the United Kingdom, Germany and France

The United Kingdom, France and Germany have called on Iran not to intensify tensions and to continue negotiations after the reintegration of UN sanctions on Saturday.
The three countries declared that they had “no other choice” than to bring the radical measures against Tehran “as a last resort” to his “continuous nuclear escalation” and the lack of cooperation.
“We urge Iran to abstain from any climbing action,” they said in a joint statement, adding: “The reimposition of UN sanctions is not the end of diplomacy.”
Iranian President Masoud Pezeshkian insisted last week that the country did not intend to develop nuclear weapons and condemned the reassessment of international sanctions as “unjust, unjust and illegal”.
The United Nations radical economic and military sanctions were reposed in Iran at 00:00 GMT on Saturday – a decade after their lifting in a historic international agreement on its nuclear program.
Iran intensified the ban on nuclear activity after the United States left the agreement in 2016. Donald Trump withdrew the United States during his first mandate as president, criticizing the agreement – the Complete Complete Action Plan (JCPOA) – negotiated under his predecessor Barack Obama, as a parade.
The talks between the three countries and Iran on the sidelines of the United Nations General Assembly this week failed to produce an agreement that would have delayed the reimpected sanctions.
In a joint declaration early on Sunday, the foreign ministers of the three European countries, known as E3, said: “Since Iran violated these commitments on several occasions, E3 had no choice but to trigger the Snapback procedure, at the end of which these resolutions were returned in force.”
In the meantime, they have declared that they “would continue to continue the tracks and diplomatic negotiations”.
They cited Iran’s inability to “take the necessary measures to respond to our concerns, nor to respond to our extension requests, despite a complete dialogue”.
More specifically, they mentioned Tehran’s refusal to cooperate with the United Nations nuclear guard dog, the IAEA.
“Iran has not authorized the IAEA inspectors to resume access to Iran’s nuclear sites, and it has not produced and transmitted to the AIEA a report representing its high -registration uranium stock,” the statement said.
Iran suspended the IAEA inspection after Israel and the United States bombed several of its nuclear sites and military bases in June.
Iran is legally obliged by the nuclear treaty to authorize the inspections of its nuclear sites, and Friday, the IAEA confirmed that they had resumed. But while Iran was in talks with the IAEA to find a path to follow, he also warned that a return of sanctions will endanger this.
Pezeshkian returned from his previous threats to Iran to leave the non-proliferation treaty.
But, addressing journalists on Friday, he added that Tehran would need to reassure that his nuclear installations would not be attacked by Israel in order to normalize his nuclear enrichment program.
He also rejected an American request to submit all the Uranium stocks enriched with Iran in exchange for a three-month exemption from the sanctions, saying: “Why would we put ourselves in such a trap and have a knot flowing around our neck every month?”
Iran said on Saturday that he recalled his ambassadors in Great Britain, France and Germany for consultations.
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