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Unravelling of the Iran nuclear deal Paris, Sept 20 (AFP) Sep 20, 2020 A landmark 2015 deal on Iran's nuclear programme has been falling apart since the United States unilaterally pulled out of the agreement in May 2018. On Saturday, Washington declared that UN sanctions were back in force, a move other major countries -- including its allies -- said lacked legal basis. Here is a snapshot:
"We cannot prevent an Iranian nuclear bomb under the decaying and rotten structure of the current agreement," Trump says.
Major international firms halt their activities and projects in Iran. In May 2019, Washington ends its sanctions exemptions for countries buying Iranian crude oil.
Trump then sanctions Iran's steel and mining sectors. In July, Tehran says it has exceeded the accord's restrictions on its enriched uranium reserves and uranium enrichment level.
On November 4, Tehran says its enrichment increased tenfold and that it has developed two new advanced centrifuges. Later that month, it resumes enrichment at its underground Fordow plant in its fourth walk-back and says its heavy water reserves have passed the accord's limit.
Iran announces its fifth step back from the deal on January 5, foregoing a limit on its number of centrifuges.
On March 31, European signatories say they have delivered medical goods to Iran, in the first transaction under the Instex mechanism set up to bypass the US sanctions.
On June 5, the IAEA says Iran has accumulated enriched uranium at nearly eight times the limit of the accord and has for months blocked inspections at key sites. On June 19, IAEA governors pass a resolution critical of Iran, the first of its kind since 2012, urging Tehran to provide its inspectors with access to two sites.
On August 20, the United States formally begins the process of activating a controversial mechanism aimed at reimposing UN sanctions on Iran. It immediately comes up against opposition from European and other powers.
Iran's stockpile of enriched uranium now stands at more than ten times the limit set down in the 2015 deal, the IAEA says. On September 20, Washington unilaterally proclaims UN sanctions against Iran are back in force, and promises to punish those who violate them.
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