<p>The 2015 deal with world powers to limit Iran's military nuclear development started unravelling when the United States quit in May 2018, with Iran progressively rolling back its commitments.</p>.<p>Here is a timeline:</p>.<p>On May 8, 2018, President Donald Trump unilaterally pulls the United States out of the accord and announces the reimposition of sanctions against Iran and companies with ties to it.</p>.<p>"We cannot prevent an Iranian nuclear bomb under the decaying and rotten structure of the current agreement," he says.</p>.<p>Iran has always denied its nuclear programme has any military dimension.</p>.<p>Tehran urges the remaining parties -- Britain, China, France, Germany and Russia -- to salvage the deal.</p>.<p>On August 7, Washington imposes sanctions targeting access to US banknotes and key industries such as cars and carpets.</p>.<p>New sanctions on November 5 hit Iran's vital oil sector and central bank transactions.</p>.<p>Major international firms halt their activities or projects in Iran.</p>.<p>In May 2019 Washington ends its sanctions exemptions on eight countries buying Iranian crude.</p>.<p>Iran on May 8, 2019 announces its first step back from the deal, saying it will suspend commitments on limiting the amount of heavy water and enriched uranium it possesses.</p>.<p>Trump announces new measures against its steel and mining sectors.</p>.<p>On July 1, Iran says it has exceeded the 300-kilogram limit on its enriched uranium reserves.</p>.<p>Six days later, it confirms it has also breached the accord's uranium enrichment cap of 3.67 percent.</p>.<p>On September 4, Iranian President Hassan Rouhani lifts all limits on nuclear research and development.</p>.<p>Tensions soar after a wave of aerial attacks on September 14 on two major Saudi oil facilities, blamed on Tehran. It denies involvement.</p>.<p>On September 20, Trump announces new sanctions on Iran's central bank, calling them "the highest sanctions ever imposed on a country".</p>.<p>On September 26, the IAEA nuclear watchdog says Iran has started using advanced centrifuges to enrich uranium.</p>.<p>On November 4, Tehran says its enrichment has reached five kilograms per day, more than a tenfold increase, and announces it has developed two new advanced centrifuges.</p>.<p>It comes after the expiry of a Tehran deadline for the remaining parties to the deal to create a mechanism for foreign firms to continue doing business in Iran.</p>.<p>On November 7, Iran resumes uranium enrichment at its underground Fordo plant -- its fourth walkback from the accord.</p>.<p>On the 18th, it says Iranian heavy water reserves have passed the limit fixed by the accord.</p>.<p>On November 27, France raises the possibility of triggering a dispute mechanism in the deal that could lead to the reimposition of UN sanctions against Iran.</p>.<p>On December 5, Britain, France and Germany accuse Iran, in a letter to the UN, of developing nuclear-capable ballistic missiles.</p>.<p>Iranian Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif dismisses the charge as "a desperate falsehood".</p>.<p>On January 5, 2020, Iran announces its fifth step back from the deal, saying it will forgo a "limit on the number of centrifuges" while stressing it will continue cooperation with the IAEA.</p>.<p>The announcement comes after a US drone strike killed top Iranian military commander Qasem Soleimani in Iraq, sparking fury in Iran.</p>.<p>"Iran's nuclear programme no longer faces any limitation in the operational field," it says.</p>
<p>The 2015 deal with world powers to limit Iran's military nuclear development started unravelling when the United States quit in May 2018, with Iran progressively rolling back its commitments.</p>.<p>Here is a timeline:</p>.<p>On May 8, 2018, President Donald Trump unilaterally pulls the United States out of the accord and announces the reimposition of sanctions against Iran and companies with ties to it.</p>.<p>"We cannot prevent an Iranian nuclear bomb under the decaying and rotten structure of the current agreement," he says.</p>.<p>Iran has always denied its nuclear programme has any military dimension.</p>.<p>Tehran urges the remaining parties -- Britain, China, France, Germany and Russia -- to salvage the deal.</p>.<p>On August 7, Washington imposes sanctions targeting access to US banknotes and key industries such as cars and carpets.</p>.<p>New sanctions on November 5 hit Iran's vital oil sector and central bank transactions.</p>.<p>Major international firms halt their activities or projects in Iran.</p>.<p>In May 2019 Washington ends its sanctions exemptions on eight countries buying Iranian crude.</p>.<p>Iran on May 8, 2019 announces its first step back from the deal, saying it will suspend commitments on limiting the amount of heavy water and enriched uranium it possesses.</p>.<p>Trump announces new measures against its steel and mining sectors.</p>.<p>On July 1, Iran says it has exceeded the 300-kilogram limit on its enriched uranium reserves.</p>.<p>Six days later, it confirms it has also breached the accord's uranium enrichment cap of 3.67 percent.</p>.<p>On September 4, Iranian President Hassan Rouhani lifts all limits on nuclear research and development.</p>.<p>Tensions soar after a wave of aerial attacks on September 14 on two major Saudi oil facilities, blamed on Tehran. It denies involvement.</p>.<p>On September 20, Trump announces new sanctions on Iran's central bank, calling them "the highest sanctions ever imposed on a country".</p>.<p>On September 26, the IAEA nuclear watchdog says Iran has started using advanced centrifuges to enrich uranium.</p>.<p>On November 4, Tehran says its enrichment has reached five kilograms per day, more than a tenfold increase, and announces it has developed two new advanced centrifuges.</p>.<p>It comes after the expiry of a Tehran deadline for the remaining parties to the deal to create a mechanism for foreign firms to continue doing business in Iran.</p>.<p>On November 7, Iran resumes uranium enrichment at its underground Fordo plant -- its fourth walkback from the accord.</p>.<p>On the 18th, it says Iranian heavy water reserves have passed the limit fixed by the accord.</p>.<p>On November 27, France raises the possibility of triggering a dispute mechanism in the deal that could lead to the reimposition of UN sanctions against Iran.</p>.<p>On December 5, Britain, France and Germany accuse Iran, in a letter to the UN, of developing nuclear-capable ballistic missiles.</p>.<p>Iranian Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif dismisses the charge as "a desperate falsehood".</p>.<p>On January 5, 2020, Iran announces its fifth step back from the deal, saying it will forgo a "limit on the number of centrifuges" while stressing it will continue cooperation with the IAEA.</p>.<p>The announcement comes after a US drone strike killed top Iranian military commander Qasem Soleimani in Iraq, sparking fury in Iran.</p>.<p>"Iran's nuclear programme no longer faces any limitation in the operational field," it says.</p>