President Rouhani made the announcement during an address on the occasion of the Student’s Day at the Tehran University on Tuesday.
The deal, dubbed the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action (JCPOA), involves a total of seven sides, namely Iran, the US, the UK, France, Germany, Russia, and China. It was reached in July 2015.
The deal stipulates that nuclear-related sanctions against Iran be terminated and no such sanctions be imposed as long as Iran meets its side of the bargain, including certain limits to its nuclear program.
Numerous reports by the US administration and the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA), which has been tasked with monitoring the technical implementation of the JCPOA, have confirmed Iranian compliance.
However, the US Congress voted recently in favor of extending the US president’s authority to potentially impose sanctions on US entities that do business with Iran.
The passing of the bill, known as the Iran Sanctions Act (ISA), at the US Congress sparked speculation that new sanctions were to be imposed against Iran in what would be a violation of the JCPOA’s text.
Iranian officials have described the Congress vote itself as a violation of the deal, too.
The ISA needs the US president’s approval to become law. While the White House is expected to sign the ISA, it has said it will use a provision in the bill that allows the waiving of nuclear-related sanctions.
In his Tuesday speech, President Rouhani said, “Even if the US president declares invalid part of the bill ratified at the US Congress, we will react to the level of JCPOA violation that has [already] been committed.”
Other parties to the JCPOA have already warned against unilateral breaches.
The deal has been endorsed by the United Nations Security Council, which means it has become international law. Iran had warned that any breach of the agreement would be confronted, Press TV reported.
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