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Pompeo: US Cutting Iran Nuke Deal-Related Waivers, Measure Effective in 60 Days

© AP Photo / IIPA,Ebrahim NorouziA worker stands at the entrance of the reactor of Bushehr nuclear power plant, outside the southern city of Bushehr, Iran (File)
A worker stands at the entrance of the reactor of Bushehr nuclear power plant, outside the southern city of Bushehr, Iran (File) - Sputnik International
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Citing "Iran's continued nuclear escalation," US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo has announced that the sanctions waiver for Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action-related projects in Iran will expire in 60 days.

"The Iranian regime has continued its nuclear brinkmanship by expanding proliferation sensitive activities. These escalatory actions are unacceptable and I cannot justify renewing the waiver for these JCPOA-related activities as a result," argued Pompeo in the May 27 news release

He also noted that the State Department also moved to sanction "two leaders of Iran's nuclear enrichment program": Majid Agha’i and Amjad Sazgar. 

At the same time, the US official revealed Washington would be providing a 90-day extension for the waiver regarding international support to Iran's Bushehr Nuclear Power Plant Unit 1 "to ensure safety," according to Reuters.

The State Department's latest move was expected following a Wednesday afternoon report in the Washington Post which cited an internal memo from the department. 

According to the outlet, the memo noted Pompeo would move to “end the sanctions waiver covering JCPOA-related nuclear projects in Iran." 

Alex Vatanka, an expert on Iran with the Middle East Institute, told Reuters that the Trump administration's decision to place tighter restrictions on Iran's nuclear program is part of an effort to "make [life] as hard as possible for whoever takes over from Trump." 

Back in March, Pompeo begrudgingly signed off on waiver extensions after Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin reportedly argued that eliminating the waivers would not be in the best interest of the Trump administration amid the global pandemic. 

“Iran’s continued expansion of nuclear activities is unacceptable. The regime’s nuclear extortion is among the greatest threats to international peace and security,” State Department spokesperson Morgan Ortagus said at the time, as reported by the Associated Press. 

The waivers were some of the last remnants of the Iran nuclear deal, which US President Donald Trump abandoned in May 2018. Since then, tensions between Tehran and Washington have escalated due to US-imposed, anti-Iran sanctions

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