Europe Triggers Snapback Sanctions on Iran Over Nuclear Breaches

by Emmitt Barry, with reporting from Worthy News Jerusalem Bureau Staff

LONDON/JERUSALEM (Worthy News) – Britain, France, and Germany moved Thursday to reimpose sweeping international sanctions on Iran, a step that European governments hope will pressure Tehran back into nuclear negotiations with the Trump administration.

The three European powers, known as the “E3,” stated that they triggered the sanctions “snapback” due to Iran’s “clear and deliberate” violations of the 2015 nuclear deal, the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action (JCPOA). The U.S. abandoned the deal in 2018, but the E3, along with Iran, Russia, and China, remained parties to it.

The move begins a 30-day countdown after which Iran will again face United Nations-backed restrictions on banking, trade, weapons sales, and nuclear activities — sanctions that devastated its economy before the deal was struck. Diplomats acknowledged that if implemented, the measures would deal a final death blow to the JCPOA.

Iran’s foreign ministry blasted the decision as “unlawful” and vowed an “appropriate response.” Tehran’s Deputy Foreign Minister, Kazem Gharibabadi, warned that snapback would end talks with the U.N. nuclear watchdog over inspections. The International Atomic Energy Agency recently confirmed that Iran possesses enough highly enriched uranium to build around 10 nuclear weapons.

European diplomats accused Iran of stockpiling more than nine “Significant Quantities” of enriched uranium without civilian justification and blocking monitoring of critical sites, including Fordow and Natanz. “Iran’s nuclear program is a clear threat to international peace and security,” the E3 ministers wrote.

U.S. Secretary of State Marco Rubio welcomed the European decision, saying Washington would work with its allies to ensure “successful completion of the snapback.” He stressed that the U.S. remains open to direct talks with Tehran but warned that diplomacy requires “credible assurances” that Iran’s nuclear program is peaceful.

Under the snapback system, Russia and China cannot veto the return of sanctions at the Security Council. However, both nations have backed Iran’s claim that the Europeans lack legal standing to reinstate penalties. Analysts say while renewed sanctions may have limited immediate economic impact — with China likely to keep buying Iranian oil — they will further complicate Iran’s financial dealings and isolate it diplomatically.

Tehran has threatened to retaliate by withdrawing from the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty, escalating the standoff. Some in Iran’s leadership advocate restraint, fearing an NPT exit could provoke further Israeli or U.S. strikes on its nuclear sites.

With a 30-day window before sanctions automatically snap back, diplomats expect frantic negotiations. The E3 said they could still delay the sanctions if Tehran takes “swift, tangible action” to restart talks, cooperate fully with inspectors, and account for its weapons-grade stockpile.

Copyright 1999-2026 Worthy News. This article was originally published on Worthy News and was reproduced with permission.


Latest News from Worthy News

Appeals Court Keeps Trump’s 10% Global Tariffs in Place — For Now
Appeals Court Keeps Trump’s 10% Global Tariffs in Place — For Now

A federal appeals court on Tuesday temporarily allowed the Trump administration to continue collecting its 10% global tariff, pausing a lower-court ruling that found the import duties unlawful for three plaintiffs who had won relief last week. The U.S. Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit issued a short-term administrative stay while it considers whether to keep the tariffs in place during the government’s appeal.

Arab Gulf Powers Reportedly Strike Iran, Signaling Major Shift In Regional Alliances
Arab Gulf Powers Reportedly Strike Iran, Signaling Major Shift In Regional Alliances

Saudi Arabia launched covert airstrikes inside Iran during the recent Middle East war, according to a Reuters exclusive citing two Western officials and two Iranian officials — a move that, if confirmed, would mark the first known Saudi military action carried out directly on Iranian soil. The reported strikes came in late March after the kingdom suffered Iranian attacks, including missile and drone strikes that exposed vulnerabilities in the U.S.-backed security umbrella protecting Gulf Arab states.

Putin Says Russia’s ‘Satan II’ Nuclear Missile Passes Test, Set For Deployment By Year’s End
Putin Says Russia’s ‘Satan II’ Nuclear Missile Passes Test, Set For Deployment By Year’s End

Russian President Vladimir Putin announced Tuesday that Russia had successfully test-fired its new Sarmat intercontinental ballistic missile — nicknamed “Satan II” by NATO — declaring it the most powerful missile in the world and saying it would enter combat service by the end of 2026.

Hungary Risks EU Clash Over Russian Energy Imports
Hungary Risks EU Clash Over Russian Energy Imports

Hungary’s new government signaled Monday it will continue buying Russian energy despite European Union plans to phase out imports of Russian oil and natural gas, raising the prospect of an early confrontation with Brussels.

Evangelical Churches Growing In Ukraine As War Drags On
Evangelical Churches Growing In Ukraine As War Drags On

More than 100 new evangelical churches have reportedly opened and thousands of people have been baptized in Ukraine since Russia launched its full-scale invasion of the country in February 2022, church leaders say.

Hezbollah Vows To Keep Weapons, Says Iran-U.S. Deal Is Best Chance To Halt Israeli Operations
Hezbollah Vows To Keep Weapons, Says Iran-U.S. Deal Is Best Chance To Halt Israeli Operations

Hezbollah Secretary-General Naim Qassem said an agreement between Iran and the United States may be the best path to ending Israeli military operations in Lebanon, while defiantly rejecting any outside demand that the Iranian-backed terrorist group disarm.

US Charges Ship Operator Over Deadly Baltimore Bridge Collapse
US Charges Ship Operator Over Deadly Baltimore Bridge Collapse

U.S. federal prosecutors announced criminal charges Tuesday against the operator of the cargo ship that struck and destroyed Baltimore’s Francis Scott Key Bridge in 2024, killing six construction workers.