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Putin’s spokesman warns ‘negative consequences’ if Trump backs out of Iran nuclear deal

October 10, 2017

A spokesman for Russian President Vladimir Putin told reporters on Monday that there would be “negative consequences” for the U.S. if President Donald Trump backs out of the landmark Iran nuclear deal.

“Obviously if one country leaves the deal, especially such a key country as the U.S., then that will have negative consequences,” Russian President Vladimir Putin’s spokesman Dmitry Peskov said Monday, according to a report. “We can only try to predict the nature of these consequences, which we are doing now.”

Russia (Twitter)

President Trump is reportedly going to “decertify” the Iran nuclear deal, and say the country is not in compliance with terms of the pact that was forged under the Obama Administration in 2015.

This would push the deal back to Congress, who would be forced to decide whether or not the U.S. will continue to abide by the terms of the deal, or go back to pre-2015 sanctions against Iran.

The President has until Oct. 15 to make a decision.

Trump has in the past said the deal is “one of the worst one-sided transactions the U.S. has ever entered into,” and it is not in America’s best interest.

During his speech last month at the United Nations General Assembly, Trump accused Iran of funding terrorists and creating a dangerous missile arsenal. The Iranian President later came out and said flatly that Iran wants to strengthen its missile capabilities – and doesn’t intend to ask permission to do it. And, Iran revealed a new ballistic missile during a military parade there.

The Iranian nuclear deal was drawn up in 2015 with Iran, the U.S. and five other nations. Its framework includes stipulations that Iran would redesign, convert and reduce its number of nuclear facilities in order to lift nuclear-related economical sanctions, which would reportedly free up billions of dollars in oil revenue and frozen assets for Iran. The U.S. and Iran also agreed to their own terms, along with terms penned with other nations.

President Trump had told the U.N. that the Iranian government “masks a corrupt dictatorship behind the false guise of a democracy,” and that it has “turned a wealthy country with rich history and culture into a rogue state whose chief exports are violence, bloodshed and chaos.”

Trump said the oil profits Iran makes “fund terrorists that kill innocent Muslims and attack peaceful neighbors.”

“We can’t let this happen while they also build dangerous missiles. We can’t abide by the agreement if they eventually construct a nuclear program,” the President said, pointing out that the Iran deal was “one of the worst one-sided transactions the U.S. has ever entered into,” and it’s an “embarrassment to the U.S.”

“I don’t think you’ve heard the last of it, believe me,” Trump said. “It’s time for the entire world to join us in telling Iran to stop pursuing death and destruction. […] Stop supporting terrorists.”

“We will stop radical Islamic terrorism because we can not allow it to tear up our nation and the entire world,” the President added.

Reuters had reported that Secretary of State Rex Tillerson said the agreement needs to change or the U.S. would not continue abiding by it, but that Iran has said the deal can’t be renegotiated.

Following the President’s U.N. address, Iran’s Foreign Minister, Mohammad Javad Zarif, said Trump’s speech was “absurd” and that the President was “seriously ill-informed” about the deal.