producer by a quarter and choked its economy will be lifted and billions of dollars in frozen assets unblocked.
World oil prices fell on Tuesday following the breakthrough, with US benchmark West Texas Intermediate for August delivery down $1.05 (0.95 euros) at $51.15 (46.46 euros).The accord — which was built on a framework first hammered out in April — is Obama’s crowning foreign policy achievement six years after he told Iran’s leaders that if they “unclench their fist, they will find an extended hand from us.”
It’s also the fruit of Rouhani’s attempts since his election in 2013 to end Iran’s isolation. The agreement may lead to more cooperation between Tehran and Washington at a particularly explosive time in the Middle East with theemergence last year of the Islamic State group, a common enemy, which controls swathes of Syria and Iraq.
Erasing decades of hostility will be tough, though, as seen in Iranian supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei’s July 11 comments about US “arrogance” and the burning of US and Israeli flags last week.
The prospect of better US-Iran relations alarms Saudi Arabia and some other Gulf Arab states, which are deeply suspicious of Iran and accuse it of stoking unrest in Syria, Yemen and elsewhere.
Reflecting the concerns, a senior US official said Obama would soon speak to Israeli and Saudi leaders.Obama’s Republican opponents who control Congress will have 60 days to review the agreement. During this time Obama cannot waive Congressional sanctions, which for Iran are the most painful.
The opponents, backed by legions of lobbyists, are set to launch an intense campaign to try and secure a two-thirds majority to override a presidential veto and scupper the deal.
House Speaker John Boehner, a Republican, said Tuesday the agreement was “likely to fuel a nuclear arms race around the world”, adding that lawmakers would “review every detail of this agreement very closely.”
Even if the agreement gets past Congress — the Iranian parliament and the UN Security Council also have to approve it — implementing the accord could be a rough ride.
France said it expected Security Council approval “within days”, while a US official said a resolution could be introduced next week.
The UN nuclear watchdog will have to verify that Iran does indeed scale down its facilities, clearing the way for the complex choreography of ending UN, US and EU sanctions.
Meanwhile, Iranians poured onto the streets of Tehran after the Ramazan fast ended at sundown Tuesday to celebrate the historic nuclear deal agreed with world powers in Vienna.
Shortly after the end of the daytime fast, an AFP reporter saw hundreds of people taking to the capital’s main thoroughfare, Vale-Asr Avenue, with cars sounding their horns.
“If you look at the street tonight it’s because we are happy,” enthused Giti, a 42-year-old woman who has lived in Canada and the United States and who had been thinking of going back to North America before the deal was struck.
“Maybe the economy is going to change, especially for the young people. I was thinking about leaving, but now I will stay to see what happens,” she said.