President Donald Trump said Monday that he was imposing sanctions on Iranians for violating a UN arms embargo and demanded enforcement by US allies, who roundly dispute that he has any such authority.
Trump's defiant move came on the very day that the United Nations was celebrating its 75th anniversary with a virtual summit full of calls for greater international cooperation.
The Trump administration said it was imposing sanctions on 27 individuals and entities under a UN resolution including Iran's defense ministry, its Atomic Energy Organization and Venezuela's leftist leader Nicolas Maduro, whom Washington is trying to topple.
"The United States has now restored UN sanctions on Iran," Trump said in a statement.
"My actions today send a clear message to the Iranian regime and those in the international community who refuse to stand up to Iran."
The Trump administration argues that it is enforcing a UN arms embargo that Iran has violated, including through an attack on Saudi oil facilities.
The embargo on conventional arms shipments to Iran is set to expire next month after the United States failed to win support for a new UN resolution.
The Trump administration says it is "snapping back" virtually all UN sanctions on Iran as part of a 2015 nuclear accord with Tehran negotiated by former president Barack Obama.
Trump pulled out of the deal with fanfare in 2018 and Secretary of State Mike Pompeo again on Monday called it an "abject failure."
But Pompeo argues that the United States is still a "participant" in the deal -- with the right to impose sanctions for violations -- as it was listed in the resolution that blessed Obama's diplomatic effort.
- Iran says no renegotiating -
The legal argument has been rejected by almost the entire UN Security Council, with European allies of the United States saying the priority is to salvage a peaceful solution on Iran's nuclear program.
"We have made it very clear that every member state in the United Nations has a responsibility to enforce the sanctions," Pompeo told reporters when asked about European opposition.
"That certainly includes the United Kingdom, France and Germany."
A news conference to announce the move was scheduled at the very time that Iranian Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif was speaking before a leading US think tank, in an appearance denounced by the Trump administration.
Zarif told the Council on Foreign Relations that the latest move would have no "significant impact" on his country.
"The United States has exerted all the pressure it could on Iran, it has. It had hoped that these sanctions will bring our population to the knees. It didn't," Zarif said.
The United States already slapped sweeping unilateral sanctions on Iran when Trump withdrew from the nuclear accord, at a time that UN inspectors said Tehran was in compliance with the deal that was meant to offer it economic relief.
The latest move has led some observers to conclude that Trump's real goal is to definitively kill the nuclear deal ahead of November 3 elections, in which his Democratic rival Joe Biden has been a staunch supporter of the nuclear accord.
Zarif said that Iran was not willing to renegotiate the original accord even if Biden wins.
"The United States must first prove that it's worthy of the trust that is required for its re-entry into the deal before it sets conditions," Zarif said.
- Snub at UN -
The Trump administration has been seeking to reduce Iran's regional clout and boost its rivals Saudi Arabia and Israel.
It achieved a significant win earlier this month when the United Arab Emirates and Bahrain recognized Israel.
But the US has had less success in its goal of ousting Maduro, who enjoys support from Venezuela's military, China and Russia.
Pompeo was joined by cabinet colleagues and the US ambassador to the United Nations, Kelly Craft, who traveled to Washington rather than stay in New York for the world body's 75th anniversary summit.
As world leaders sent recorded messages, the United States was represented by its acting deputy envoy, although Trump is expected to speak virtually to the annual General Assembly on Tuesday.
UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres opened the summit with a call to seek multilateral solutions.
"No one wants a world government -- but we must work together to improve world governance," Guterres said.
(Except for the headline, this story has not been edited by NDTV staff and is published from a syndicated feed.)
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