Trump's Transition Team Considers New Sanctions Against Iran

© AFP 2023 / DON EMMERTUS President-elect Donald Trump(2nd-R) and Vice President-elect Mike Pence(C) leave the Lamington Presbyterian Church after Sunday services in Bedminster, New Jersey November 20, 2016
US President-elect Donald Trump(2nd-R) and Vice President-elect Mike Pence(C) leave the Lamington Presbyterian Church after Sunday services in Bedminster, New Jersey November 20, 2016 - Sputnik International
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The transition team of newly elected US president Donald Trump could impose new sanctions against Iran's ballistic missile program or human rights sphere, according to media reports.

Iran May Stop Buying US Goods in Response to Sanctions Extension
MOSCOW (Sputnik) — The transition team of newly elected US president Donald Trump examined proposals on imposing additional sanctions against Iran, after the Senate approved to prolong the decade-long anti-Tehran sanctions, media reported Friday, citing sources in the US congress.

The new sanctions against Iran may impact Iran’s ballistic missile program or human rights sphere, according to congressional sources, the Financial Times newspaper reported.

"They are already looking closely at their options — and that very much includes non-nuclear sanctions," a congressional official familiar with the matter said, as quoted by the newspaper.

On Thursday, the US Senate voted unanimously to prolong the 1979 sanctions against Tehran by another 10 years after they expire later this month. The extension was endorsed by the lower chamber of the parliament last month and would now go before President Barack Obama, who is expected to sign it before he leaves office next year.

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The same day, Iranian Foreign Ministry spokesman Bahram Ghasemi said that the decision to renew sanctions was in breach of last year’s nuclear deal.

In July 2015, Iran and the P5+1 group of nations – the United States, the United Kingdom, France, China and Russia, plus Germany – agreed on a gradual lifting of sanctions in exchange for Tehran keeping its nuclear program exclusively for peaceful uses. The agreement took effect on January 16, after the International Atomic Energy Agency officially confirmed Iran’s compliance with the deal’s provisions.

During the 2016 presidential election, Trump was very critical of the Iran nuclear agreement, characterizing it as one of the worst in history.

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