Iran is set to break an agreement stopping it building nuclear weapons in the wake of a top Iranian general’s death. On Sunday officials in Tehran announced the country would no longer comply with limits agreed to in the 2015 nuclear deal, two days after General Qassem Soleimani was killed in a US drone strike. While the country looks to start the fuel enrichment essential for nuclear weapon development, the battle against ISIS is set to stall – and the radical fundamentalists could regroup. Iraq’s parliament has backed a bill calling for the expulsion of all US troops from Iraqi soil, meaning the effort to keep the remaining ISIS forces at bay could be seriously hindered. Today the US announced that it had paused its anti-ISIS efforts, “subject to continuous review.” In the wake of the announcement the UK Government has urged Iraq to allow UK soldiers to continue the fight there against the terrorist group. The resolution, which was not legally binding but will likely be heeded by Prime Minister Adel Abdul Mahdihad, was passed on Sunday. Some 400 UK troops are stationed in Iraq in the fight against IS, while the US has 5,200, prompting fears of a… Read full this story
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