Europe warns Iran of sanctions snapback without deal

France, the U.K., and Germany are threatening to reinstate full U.N. sanctions on Iran if it doesn’t come back to the nuclear negotiation table by the end of August.
This warning came in a joint letter delivered to the U.N. Security Council and Secretary-General António Guterres, according to Financial Times.
The three European countries, also known as the E3, said they would activate the “snapback” option if Iran refuses to reach a diplomatic agreement or fails to accept an extension.
This letter was sent just two months after the U.S. and Israel carried out 12 straight days of strikes on Iran’s nuclear infrastructure, a military campaign that pushed oil prices through the roof and sparked concerns across the Middle East.
The E3’s message followed that operation with a clear ultimatum. If Iran won’t talk, they’ll trigger the same U.N. sanctions the 2015 nuclear deal had previously suspended.
Europe sets deadline as U.N. sanctions hang over Iran
The snapback mechanism, baked into the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action signed in 2015, allows any of the deal’s signatories to bring back all U.N. penalties without needing approval from the Security Council. That includes arms embargoes, financial restrictions, and trade bans.
No member can veto it; not the U.S., not Russia, not China.
The EU already said in mid-July it would begin this process if Iran shows no progress by August 29. Those U.N. sanctions are due to expire on October 18, but if one country triggers the snapback, the expiration gets canceled automatically. That’s what the E3 is now preparing for.
No more delays, no more waiting for Iran to play nice. Either Tehran engages, or Europe pulls the lever.
In a July briefing, Ellie Geranmayeh, who works as Deputy Director for the Middle East and North Africa program at the European Council on Foreign Relations, wrote that “‘snapback’ looks set to be the word of the summer in European negotiations with Iran.” That was a preview of the strategy unfolding now.
Meanwhile, CNBC confirmed it contacted Iran’s foreign ministry and mission to the U.N. for comment but hadn’t received any response.
Iran continues enrichment as economy crumbles
Tehran has claimed it’s open to speaking directly with Washington again, but it has not agreed to halt uranium enrichment. The sixth round of direct negotiations between Iran and the U.S. collapsed in mid-June, after Israeli and American forces bombed Iran’s nuclear facilities.
Since then, there’s been radio silence from both sides. The nuclear talks have been dead since Donald Trump withdrew the U.S. from the JCPOA in 2018. Trump, now back in the White House, made his position crystal clear: he would never allow a nuclear-armed Iran.
After the U.S. exit, Iran sped up its nuclear program to record levels. The International Atomic Energy Agency, the U.N.’s watchdog, says uranium is now being enriched up to 60% purity inside Iran, way above the 3.67% ceiling set in the 2015 deal. The agency has also issued multiple warnings about the situation.
Tehran insists this enrichment is meant for energy production, not bombs. But 60% puts it dangerously close to weapons-grade, which begins at 90%. And nobody’s taking Iran at its word anymore.
That sharp rise in enrichment is only part of the picture. Officials inside Iran have also warned that if the U.N. reinstates sanctions, Tehran might pull out of the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty completely. That would cut off global access to the country’s nuclear sites and remove all outside monitoring.
Since Trump pulled the U.S. out of the JCPOA, Iran’s economy has taken massive damage. Sanctions crushed its oil exports, slammed its banks, and gutted the currency. But even with all that pressure, Tehran hasn’t stepped back from enrichment. Instead, it’s doubled down.
Get seen where it counts. Advertise in Cryptopolitan Research and reach crypto’s sharpest investors and builders.
Europe warns Iran of sanctions snapback without deal

France, the U.K., and Germany are threatening to reinstate full U.N. sanctions on Iran if it doesn’t come back to the nuclear negotiation table by the end of August.
This warning came in a joint letter delivered to the U.N. Security Council and Secretary-General António Guterres, according to Financial Times.
The three European countries, also known as the E3, said they would activate the “snapback” option if Iran refuses to reach a diplomatic agreement or fails to accept an extension.
This letter was sent just two months after the U.S. and Israel carried out 12 straight days of strikes on Iran’s nuclear infrastructure, a military campaign that pushed oil prices through the roof and sparked concerns across the Middle East.
The E3’s message followed that operation with a clear ultimatum. If Iran won’t talk, they’ll trigger the same U.N. sanctions the 2015 nuclear deal had previously suspended.
Europe sets deadline as U.N. sanctions hang over Iran
The snapback mechanism, baked into the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action signed in 2015, allows any of the deal’s signatories to bring back all U.N. penalties without needing approval from the Security Council. That includes arms embargoes, financial restrictions, and trade bans.
No member can veto it; not the U.S., not Russia, not China.
The EU already said in mid-July it would begin this process if Iran shows no progress by August 29. Those U.N. sanctions are due to expire on October 18, but if one country triggers the snapback, the expiration gets canceled automatically. That’s what the E3 is now preparing for.
No more delays, no more waiting for Iran to play nice. Either Tehran engages, or Europe pulls the lever.
In a July briefing, Ellie Geranmayeh, who works as Deputy Director for the Middle East and North Africa program at the European Council on Foreign Relations, wrote that “‘snapback’ looks set to be the word of the summer in European negotiations with Iran.” That was a preview of the strategy unfolding now.
Meanwhile, CNBC confirmed it contacted Iran’s foreign ministry and mission to the U.N. for comment but hadn’t received any response.
Iran continues enrichment as economy crumbles
Tehran has claimed it’s open to speaking directly with Washington again, but it has not agreed to halt uranium enrichment. The sixth round of direct negotiations between Iran and the U.S. collapsed in mid-June, after Israeli and American forces bombed Iran’s nuclear facilities.
Since then, there’s been radio silence from both sides. The nuclear talks have been dead since Donald Trump withdrew the U.S. from the JCPOA in 2018. Trump, now back in the White House, made his position crystal clear: he would never allow a nuclear-armed Iran.
After the U.S. exit, Iran sped up its nuclear program to record levels. The International Atomic Energy Agency, the U.N.’s watchdog, says uranium is now being enriched up to 60% purity inside Iran, way above the 3.67% ceiling set in the 2015 deal. The agency has also issued multiple warnings about the situation.
Tehran insists this enrichment is meant for energy production, not bombs. But 60% puts it dangerously close to weapons-grade, which begins at 90%. And nobody’s taking Iran at its word anymore.
That sharp rise in enrichment is only part of the picture. Officials inside Iran have also warned that if the U.N. reinstates sanctions, Tehran might pull out of the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty completely. That would cut off global access to the country’s nuclear sites and remove all outside monitoring.
Since Trump pulled the U.S. out of the JCPOA, Iran’s economy has taken massive damage. Sanctions crushed its oil exports, slammed its banks, and gutted the currency. But even with all that pressure, Tehran hasn’t stepped back from enrichment. Instead, it’s doubled down.
Get seen where it counts. Advertise in Cryptopolitan Research and reach crypto’s sharpest investors and builders.