Iran, Russia unite against West
Iran and Russia united against the United States and Europe on Tuesday warning on the eve of new nuclear talks that an attack on the Natanz atomic site and new EU sanctions could harm ongoing negotiations.
Iran charged Monday that its arch-enemy Israel had sabotaged its Natanz uranium enrichment plant and vowed it would take "revenge" and expand its nuclear activities. The latest of a string of incidents to hit Iran’s nuclear programme came just days after talks opened in Vienna on bringing the United States back into a troubled 2015 deal that then US president Donald Trump abandoned in 2018.
Israel, which did not claim responsibility for the sabotage, is strongly opposed to US President Joe Biden’s efforts to revive the agreement. After talks with his visiting Russian counterpart Sergei Lavrov, Iranian Foreign Mohammed Javad Zarif warned the US it would gain no extra leverage in Vienna through "acts of sabotage" and sanctions.
"The Americans should know that neither sanctions nor acts of sabotage will give them negotiation tools and these acts will only make the situation more difficult for them," Zarif told a joint news conference.
He also hit out at Israel. "If (Israel) thought that they can stop Iran from following up on lifting sanctions from the Iranian people, then they made a very bad gamble. "What they did in Natanz, they thought it would reduce Iran’s leverage" in Vienna talks but "it makes it possible for Iran ... to use any capacity it has at Natanz," he said. Iran would make the enrichment plant "more powerful" by using advanced centrifuges, he added. Unsourced Israeli media reports attributed the Natanz disruption to a "cyber operation" by the Israeli security services. The New York Times, quoting unnamed US and Israeli intelligence officials, also said there had been "an Israeli role" in the attack in which an explosion had "completely destroyed" the power system that fed the plant’s "underground centrifuges".
Quoting another unnamed intelligence source on Tuesday, it added an "explosive device had been smuggled" into the site and "detonated remotely," taking out primary and backup power. The White House said the US "was not involved in any manner".
Lavrov said Moscow still expected Washington to return to the nuclear deal with Tehran, but criticised moves he said complicated the Vienna talks.
Iran and the remaining parties to the agreement have been discussing how to lift US sanctions that Trump reimposed when he quit the deal in 2018. They have also been addressing how to bring Iran back into compliance with nuclear commitments it suspended in retaliation for the US withdrawal.
"We are counting on the fact that we will be able to save the agreement and that Washington will finally return to full and complete implementation of the corresponding UN resolution," Lavrov told the joint press conference.
-
Charlize Theron Delivers Strong Message At 2026 Winter Olympics Opening Ceremony -
Lil Jon Reacts To Son Nathan Smith's Death: 'Devastated' -
Bianca Censori Reveals Where She And Kanye West Stand On Having Children Together -
Taylor Swift Hypes Olympic Athletes In Surprise Video Message -
Timothy Busfield Charged With Four Counts Of Child Sexual Abuse -
Kanye West First Contacted Bianca Censori While In Marriage To Kim Kardashian? -
Travis Kelce Reveals What His Nieces Really Do When He, Taylor Swift Visit -
Lola Young Makes Career Announcement After Stepping Back From Touring -
Priyanka Chopra Shares Heartfelt Message For Nick Jonas -
Spotify, Major Labels File $13b Lawsuit Over Alleged Music Scraping -
Travis Kelce Opens Up About Being Backup Plan For His Nieces -
Winter Olympics 2026: Chinese Robot Dance Goes Viral In Milan -
Jessica Biel Urged To Divorce Justin Timberlake? -
Rebecca Ferguson Gets Honest About Having First Kid With 22 Year Older Man -
Epstein Ties: UK Police Search Properties In Probe Into Peter Mandelson -
Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor’s Friendship With A Child Sex Offender Turns His Future Murkier