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French foreign minister holds tense talks in Tehran

AFP  |  Tehran 

French faced a tricky reception in today as he pushed for curbs to Iran's ballistic missile programme in a bid to preserve its historic nuclear deal. Le Drian said there was "still a lot of work to do" on Iran's missile programme after meeting with top officials, including and Zarif countered that needed to "play a more constructive role to preserve" the nuclear deal. "And above all to put pressure on the to meet its commitments under the deal and not to allow it to present illogical and illegal demands," Zarif added, according to an account by the foreign ministry. The visit comes in the midst of a scramble by European governments to salvage the 2015 deal after US threatened he would abandon it if it was not "improved" by May 12. Le Drian has insisted he is not "an emissary of Trump", but he has taken a firm line on Iran's missile programme and regional interventions that mirrors the rhetoric from "There are programmes for missiles with ranges of several thousand kilometres which are not in line with resolutions and go beyond what is needed to secure Iran's borders," Le Drian told on the eve of his visit. has ballistic missiles with ranges of more than 6,000 kilometres, which can be launched from submarines, but Le Drian said was risking fresh sanctions if it did not curb its missile programme, which is currently limited to 2,000 kilometres. His statements have not been warmly received in Iran, with Zarif telling today's reformist Etemad newspaper: "In order to keep the in the nuclear deal, European countries are suffering from extremism and this will ultimately undermine Europe's policy." Iran's conservative Kayhan newspaper responded with a headline saying: "French insults people of before visit to " The hardline Javan daily was even more blunt: "Trump's Parisian lackey in Tehran". Le Drian also pressed on the activities of its ally, the Syrian government, amid the ongoing bombardment of civilians in the rebel enclave of Eastern Ghouta near "The Iranian authorities told me of their heavy concerns on the humanitarian situation in and their desire to see an end to this catastrophe," Le Drian told reporters. But the key focus has been the 120-day deadline set by Trump in January for US lawmakers and European allies to "fix" the nuclear deal, the top foreign policy achievement of his predecessor has refused to re-negotiate the deal or add extra clauses, arguing that the US has already failed to keep up its end of the bargain on the existing accord. Despite Le Drian's tough talk on missiles, remains firmly behind the agreement. "We want to preserve the nuclear deal because it is working, it's robust and because the Iranians are respecting it," his team told AFP ahead of the visit. The has repeatedly found is abiding by its commitments, which curbs its nuclear programme in exchange for a lifting of international sanctions. IAEA said today that losing the nuclear deal "would be a great loss for nuclear verification and for multilateralism".

(This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

First Published: Mon, March 05 2018. 22:35 IST
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