Iran asserts its right to build missiles as U.S. considers new sanctions

January 4, 2016

The Washington Post:

Iranian President Hassan Rouhani on Thursday ordered a speed-up in the production of ­defense missiles as the United States is considering new sanctions over Iran’s ballistic-missile testing even while it prepared to lift old sanctions under the nuclear deal.

In a letter to the Defense Ministry made public by the official Islamic Republic News Agency, Rouhani said his order was a direct response to impending sanctions that the Obama administration has proposed to Congress.

“As the U.S. government is clearly still pursuing its hostile policies and illegal meddling . . . the armed forces need to quickly and significantly increase their missile capacity,” Rouhani wrote to Defense Minister Hossein Dehghan.

Rouhani tweeted that Iran will accept no restrictions on its missile testing and production. “If US continues its illegitimate interference w/ Iran’s right to defend itself a new program will be devised to enhance missile capabilities,” he wrote.

“We have never negotiated regarding our defense capabilities, including our missile program & will not accept any restrictions in this regard,” he said in another tweet.

The discord over new sanctions and missiles is coming at a time when Washington is preparing to lift old sanctions related to Iran’s nuclear program, as agreed under a landmark accord reached in July. Tehran recently shipped 25,000 pounds of enriched uranium and materials to Russia, and it appears to be on track to fulfill the rest of its commitments before the end of the month.

It is unclear whether the latest tensions will derail the nuclear deal’s implementation, but the dispute illustrates how decades of distrust are unlikely to lessen anytime soon.

Tehran and Washington have been sparring over missiles for months. The nuclear deal reached in Vienna in July dragged on as Secretary of State John F. Kerry and Iranian Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif argued over the lifespan of United Nations resolutions prohibiting the development of missiles. Although the issue was not specifically outlined in the nuclear agreement, a subsequent U.N. resolution includes an eight-year restriction on nuclear ballistic-missile activities and a five-year ban on conventional-arms transfers.

Since then, Iran has test-fired two ballistic missiles, in October and November.

Washington contends those actions violate the U.N. resolution, but Iran says that the missiles are not capable of carrying a nuclear warhead and aren’t covered under the ban.

Nevertheless, the tests prompted Washington to weigh new economic sanctions on about a dozen people and companies. The sanctions would require U.S. banks to freeze their assets and stop doing business with them…

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