Joint statement by the Foreign Ministers of France, Germany and
the UK on the initiation of the snapback process.
"We, the Foreign Ministers of France, Germany and the United
Kingdom, share the fundamental objective that Iran shall never
seek, acquire or develop a nuclear weapon. We negotiated the
Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action (JCPoA) with the conviction
that it would decisively contribute to ensuring the exclusively
peaceful nature of Iran's nuclear programme. The United Nations
Security Council unanimously endorsed the JCPoA in resolution
2231 of 20th July 2015. It was a major achievement for
non-proliferation, as such strengthening international peace and
security.
Following the United States' withdrawal from the JCPoA on 8th May
2018, and in spite of Iran ceasing the implementation of its
commitments under the JCPoA beginning in May 2019, France,
Germany and the United Kingdom (the “E3”) remained committed
participants to the deal.
Since 2019, Iran has exceeded JCPoA limits on enriched uranium,
heavy water, and centrifuges, restricted the IAEA's ability to
conduct JCPoA verification and monitoring activities, and has
abandoned the implementation and the ratification process of the
Additional Protocol to its Comprehensive Safeguards Agreement.
These actions contravene Iran's commitments set out in the JCPoA
and have serious implications on the capacity of Iran to progress
toward developing a nuclear weapon.
This was more than five years ago. Since then, we have made all
possible efforts to resolve the impasse. We consistently
undertook intensive diplomatic efforts to deescalate tensions and
to bring Iran and the United States to the negotiating table for
a comprehensive negotiated solution. We acted in good faith to
preserve the JCPoA, in the sincere hope of finding a way to
resolve the impasse through constructive diplomatic dialogue,
while preserving the agreement and remaining within its
framework.
This included the use of the JCPoA's Dispute Resolution
Mechanism, initiated on 14 January 2020 and confirmed by the
JCPoA Coordinator, pursuant to paragraph 36 of the JCPoA.
The E3 also engaged in good faith in negotiations conducted from
6th April 2021 until 28th February 2022 to re-establish Iran's
full compliance with the JCPoA and allow for a return of the
United States to the deal. The JCPoA Coordinator tabled viable
proposals in March and again in August 2022. Iran refused both
packages while continuing to raise unacceptable demands beyond
the scope of the JCPoA. Despite this, we have continued to engage
Iran as part of our efforts to find a peaceful resolution of this
issue through diplomacy, as set out in our letter to the United
Nations Secretary General of 8th August 2025.
In July 2025, the E3 have put on the table an offer for the
extension of resolution 2231 and its snapback mechanism. The
requirements set by the E3 in exchange for this extension –
including the resumption of negotiations, Iran's compliance with
its IAEA obligations, and steps to address our concerns regarding
the high enriched uranium stockpile - have not yet been
satisfactorily met by Iran. The combination of such Iranian steps
and a time-limited extension would have provided a credible path
towards reaching a political agreement to replace the JCPoA and
address our longstanding concerns regarding Iran's nuclear
programme.
Today, Iran's non-compliance with the JCPoA is clear and
deliberate, and sites of major proliferation concern in Iran are
outside of IAEA monitoring. Iran has no civilian justification
for its high enriched uranium stockpile - now over 9 Significant
Quantities - which is also unaccounted for by the IAEA. Its
nuclear programme therefore remains a clear threat to
international peace and security.
As a result of Iran's actions, and in accordance with paragraph
11 of United Nations Security Council Resolution 2231 (2015),
France, Germany and the United Kingdom have today decided to
notify the Security Council that we believe Iran is in
significant non-performance of its commitments under the JCPoA,
thereby engaging the “snapback” mechanism.
This notification initiates the snapback process defined in
Resolution 2231. It opens a 30-day period before the possible
reestablishment of previously terminated United Nations Security
Council resolutions. We underline that these resolutions and the
measures they contain – sanctions and other restrictive measures
– are not new. On the contrary, these resolutions were previously
agreed by the Security Council and lifted in light of Iran's
commitments under the JCPoA. However, Iran has chosen not to
abide by those commitments. In accordance with Resolution 2231,
we will continue to strive to diplomatically resolve the issue of
Iran's significant non-performance. We will use the 30-day period
to continue to engage with Iran on our extension offer, or on any
serious diplomatic efforts to restore Iran's compliance with its
commitments.
We recall that if the UNSC does not adopt within 30 days a
resolution to continue the lifting of UNSC resolutions on Iran,
six Security Council resolutions, including on sanctions, will be
restored."