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GOP senator urges European allies to press forward with Iran sanctions

Marzia Hussaini
Marzia Hussaini

Iran International

Sep 24, 2025, 21:18 GMT+1Updated: 00:35 GMT+0
US Senator John Cornyn (R-TX) speaks to members of the media at the US Capitol, in Washington, DC, US, March 12, 2025
US Senator John Cornyn (R-TX) speaks to members of the media at the US Capitol, in Washington, DC, US, March 12, 2025

Republican Senator John Cornyn called on European allies to support and intensify sanctions against Iran, calling it a leading state sponsor of terrorism and an aggressor.

The United Kingdom, France and Germany last month triggered the so-called "snapback" of international sanctions on Tehran which are set to take effect on September 28.

"We need our European allies to step up and agree that these sanctions are critical," Cornyn told Iran International.

"Iran is the number one state sponsor of terrorism. Thank goodness President Trump disrupted their nuclear weapons program. But their attitude and conduct remain unchanged, and these sanctions are entirely justified," the Texas senator said.

Cornyn’s push follows a letter led by Senator Jim Risch and signed by 50 Senate Republicans last week. The letter praised the UK, France, and Germany for re-activating the UN sanctions on Iran and urged sustained pressure until Tehran’s nuclear program is fully dismantled.

The move reflects growing United States concerns over Iran’s nuclear progress and its support for proxy groups across the region.

At the UN General Assembly on Wednesday, Iranian President Masoud Pezeshkian accused the US of betraying trust, particularly after its 2018 withdrawal from the JCPOA nuclear deal, and stressed Iran’s willingness to pursue diplomacy to resolve the crisis.

Pezeshkian denied that Iran has ever sought nuclear weapons, despite the US and Israeli assertions in June that Tehran was racing toward a bomb.

"I hereby declare once more that Iran has never sought and will never seek to build a nuclear bomb," Pezeshkian said.

Addressing European powers, Pezeshkian accused Germany, Britain, and France of acting in bad faith by reinstating UN sanctions.

"The three European states, having failed through a decade of bad faith and by supporting military aggression to subdue the proud people of Iran, at the behest of the United States, sought to reinstate terminated UN Security Council resolutions through pressure, coercion, and blatant abuse," the Iranian president said.

French President Emmanuel Macron also met with Pezeshkian on the sidelines of the UN meeting, warning that time was running out. "An agreement remains possible — only hours left; it is up to Iran," Macron posted on X.

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Iran’s rial weakens on fears of looming snapback sanctions

Sep 24, 2025, 10:19 GMT+1

The Iranian rial fell sharply on Wednesday as markets braced for the reimposition of UN sanctions under the snapback mechanism, with the US dollar trading above 1,074,000 rials on the open market, more than 2% higher than a day earlier.

Sterling climbed to 1,440,000 rials, while the price of the “Emami” gold coin rose 3.5% to 1,070,000,000 rials, reflecting heightened demand for hard assets amid economic uncertainty.

On Tuesday, Iran’s central bank governor Mohammadreza Farzin sought to reassure business leaders that the country’s foreign exchange and gold reserves remain secure.

Also on Wednesday, Oil Minister Mohsen Paknejad said that reimposition of UN sanctions will not add "new burdensome restrictions" on the country’s oil sales.

"In the last years, we have faced such severe restrictions from the unjust and unilateral US sanctions that, in practice, [UN sanctions] won't add much to this situation," Paknejad said after a cabinet meeting.

The oil and petrochemical sector contributed roughly a quarter of Iran’s GDP in 2024, making continued exports critical to Tehran’s economy as sanctions loom.

Reuters also reported on Wednesday that the revival of sanctions is unlikely to halt Tehran’s vital crude exports but could hand Chinese refiners a lucrative advantage, giving them greater access to discounted Iranian oil.

Sanctions snapback to boost China’s access to cut-price Iranian oil - Reuters

Sep 24, 2025, 09:48 GMT+1

The looming revival of UN sanctions on Iran is unlikely to halt Tehran’s vital crude exports but could hand Chinese refiners a lucrative advantage, giving them greater access to discounted Iranian oil, Reuters reported on Wednesday.

Britain, France and Germany triggered the 30-day “snapback” process on August 28, accusing Iran of breaching the 2015 nuclear deal. If no agreement is reached, restrictions including an arms embargo, asset freezes and bans on nuclear-related technology will return at the end of the month.

The move would also provide a legal basis for the EU and Britain to reimpose banking, shipping and energy curbs.

But as Reuters’ columnist Ron Bousso writes, past experience shows Western sanctions have had limited lasting impact on Iranian oil flows.

Exports collapsed to 444,000 barrels per day (bpd) in 2020 after Washington reimposed sanctions but have since rebounded to 1.6 million bpd this year, with nearly 80% going to China, according to data from analytics firm Kpler.

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Despite years of US efforts to expand restrictions on tankers, traders and refiners, Iran has developed an opaque network of intermediaries, uninsured vessels and ship-to-ship transfers to keep crude flowing.

“These whack-a-mole efforts have had little and often short-lived impact,” Bousso wrote.

Analysts say the snapback may deter some Asian buyers but not Beijing, which has already defied Western sanctions by importing sanctioned Russian LNG cargoes. Chinese refiners could even gain leverage to secure Iranian oil at steeper discounts, further undermining the effectiveness of Western sanctions.

The oil and petrochemical sector contributed roughly a quarter of Iran’s GDP in 2024, making continued exports critical to Tehran’s economy as sanctions loom.

Iran accuses US of harassing diplomats at UN with new restrictions

Sep 24, 2025, 07:28 GMT+1

Iran accused the United States on Wednesday of using new restrictions on its delegation to the United Nations as a tool of political pressure, after Washington limited Iranian diplomats’ movements in New York and denied visas to much of President Masoud Pezeshkian’s media team.

Foreign Ministry spokesman Esmail Baghaei said the curbs, which include restrictions on daily activities such as grocery shopping, were aimed at “disrupting Iran's diplomatic performance” during the UN General Assembly.

He described them as “a blatant violation” of US obligations under the 1947 UN Headquarters Agreement.

“The systematic harassment of Iranian diplomats has obstructed delegates from attending several multilateral events outside the so-called ‘permitted parameters’ this week alone,” Baghaei wrote on social media, calling the measures “a new low” in US hostility toward Iranians.

The US State Department said Monday that the restrictions were intended to prevent Iran’s delegation from “lavish shopping” in New York while ordinary Iranians face economic hardship, and to limit Tehran’s ability to “promote its terrorist agenda.”

It confined delegates to the area between UN headquarters and their hotel, with transit allowances for official meetings.

Iran’s semi-official Fars news agency reported separately that most of Pezeshkian’s media staff were denied visas, leaving only two aides -- his press chief and deputy -- to cover what it called a large number of events during the trip.

It noted that under the new rules, even the purchase of fountain pens is classified as a “luxury” requiring special permits.

The dispute comes as Pezeshkian prepare to address the 80th UNGA amid heightened tensions over Iran’s nuclear program, the looming reimposition of UN “snapback” sanctions later this month, and the fallout from a 12-day war with Israel in June.

Iran, E3 hold last-ditch talks in New York before snapback deadline

Sep 23, 2025, 16:45 GMT+1

Iran and European powers held last-ditch talks in New York on Tuesday to try to prevent the revival of UN sanctions on Tehran, though diplomats on both sides cautioned that chances of success remain slim.

Foreign ministers of Iran, Britain, France and Germany – the so-called E3 – met on the sidelines of the UN General Assembly, joined by EU foreign policy chief Kaja Kallas, amid warnings that a 30-day “snapback” process to reimpose sanctions will expire on September 27.

In the meeting between Iranian and European top diplomats in New York, "some ideas and proposals for continuing diplomacy were raised, and it was decided that consultations with all involved parties would continue," according to Iran's Foreign Ministry.

"The course of discussions over the past month aimed at finding diplomatic solutions regarding Iran’s nuclear issue and preventing an escalation of tensions was reviewed in the meeting," according to the Foreign Ministry statement.

The E3 triggered the process on August 28, accusing Iran of failing to comply with a 2015 nuclear deal designed to prevent it from developing nuclear weapons. Tehran denies it seeks such arms, insisting its nuclear program is for peaceful purposes.

“Iran has been in contact with E3/EU officials and (the UN nuclear chief Rafael) Grossi since this morning at the UN Different ideas have been raised and discussed,” a senior Iranian official told Reuters on Tuesday.

Another Iranian official said “everyone seems to be trying” to find a resolution.

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Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi warned European states to choose “cooperation or confrontation.”

Speaking on state TV, he said: “They have tested Iran repeatedly and know we do not respond to the language of pressure and threat ... I hope we can find a diplomatic solution in the coming days, otherwise Tehran will take appropriate measures.”

According to diplomats, the E3 have offered to delay reinstating sanctions for up to six months if Iran restores access for UN inspectors, addresses concerns over its stockpile of enriched uranium and agrees to talks with the United States.

But two European envoys said Iran’s leaders have yet to meet these conditions. “The ball is in Iran’s camp,” one diplomat said. “It is up to it to quickly take the concrete steps in the coming days to avert snapback. If not, then sanctions will be reimposed.”

Another diplomat added, “The minimum would be for Iranians to present the special report and allow some token visit of inspectors to some sites, but even then that probably won’t fly – and chances are the US would veto.”

If no extension is agreed, all pre-2015 UN sanctions will automatically return on September 28, compounding economic pressures from US and European measures already in place.

President Masoud Pezeshkian said on Saturday that Iran would “overcome” any reimposition of sanctions. According to an insider cited by Reuters, growing discontent over the economy was rattling Iran’s leadership, with little sign of answers.

In June, following US and Israeli strikes on Iranian nuclear sites, Iran’s parliament passed a law suspending cooperation with the International Atomic Energy Agency. A deal with the IAEA was reached on September 9 to resume some inspections, though diplomats say its scope remains limited.

“I am in New York to use these remaining days for diplomatic consultations that might lead to a solution,” Araghchi said. “If it is not found, we will continue our path.”

Iran accepted diplomacy bids but West still levied sanctions, Larijani says

Sep 23, 2025, 16:35 GMT+1

Iran’s security chief Ali Larijani said on Tuesday that Tehran had accepted European and Russian proposals to avert the co-called snapback of UN sanctions, but the West triggered international sanctions on Iran nonetheless.

Larijani, who leads Iran's Supreme National Security Council, accused France of reneging on a pledge to hold back on the sanctions push if Iran made a deal with the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA).

“France, via the IAEA chief, promised to withdraw snapback demands if Iran agreed with the agency. Iran’s foreign minister signed this in Egypt, under security concerns and parliamentary mandates following bombed nuclear sites. France did not honor this,” official media quoted him as saying.

France, Britain and Germany triggered UN sanctions on August 28 through the so-called snapback mechanism of a 2015 international nuclear deal with Tehran.

On September 9, Iran and the IAEA signed a technical agreement in Cairo, mediated by Egypt, to pave the way for resuming nuclear inspections halted in June.

Ten days later, the UN Security Council rejected a resolution to keep sanctions lifted in a 4–9 vote, paving the way for sanctions to resume on September 28.

“European and Russian proposals, accepted by Iran with conditions, set a six-month negotiation period, but the West pursued snapback at the UN Security Council instead,” Larijani said.

Iran has warned that new attacks or sanctions would void the agreement, though it still sees the deal as a step toward de-escalation.

US missile demands ‘unacceptable’

Larijani also appeared to reveal details of a US proposal, saying Washington had demanded Iran reduce its missile range to under 500 km (310 miles) - “a condition no honorable person could accept,” he said.

For years, Iran has voluntarily limited its missile range, suggesting that 2,000 kilometers is sufficient to reach its main regional target, Israel.

However, a senior advisor to Iran's Supreme Leader suggested last year that the country might abandon its self-imposed missile range limit and could even pursue intercontinental capabilities if it faced an "existential threat".

Larijani made the remarks at the Tehran Chamber of Commerce, signaling preparations for the return of UN sanctions on September 28.

Iran’s Ministry of Intelligence had already issued secret guidance in August instructing ministries and major companies to prepare for the resumption of punitive UN measures.