Deccan Chronicle

Moscow, Tehran call for ‘rescue’ of Iran nuke deal

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● THE AGREEMENT was largely left in tatters after former US president Donald Trump unilateral­ly withdrew and ordered officials to reimpose tough penalties against Tehran as part of his administra­tion's “maximum pressure” policy.

Moscow, Jan. 26: Moscow and Tehran called for the rescue of the Iran nuclear deal Tuesday, as their top diplomats held their first talks since Joe Biden's election raised hopes of Washington returning to the agreement.

Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov said ahead of the talks in Moscow that “one of the most pressing topics is the task of rescuing the Joint Comprehens­ive Action Plan (JCPOA)”.

Iranian Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif thanked Moscow for its efforts to repair the JCPOA after the US exit in 2018 and for Russia's “constructi­ve and principled” position on the deal.

Zarif urged unity between Moscow and Tehran “in order to save the JCPOA from the risks and fears that arose after the United States left this plan.” The talks in Moscow come days after Zarif urged the United States to make the “fundamenta­l choice” to lift sanctions and reverse the “failed policies” of the previous administra­tion, which took a hard line on Tehran.

He cautioned that any efforts from Washington to extract additional concession­s would ultimately end in failure.

“Iran wants the nuclear deal it made,” Zarif wrote in an oped in the Foreign Affairs magazine.

The agreement was largely left in tatters after former US president Donald Trump unilateral­ly withdrew and ordered officials to reimpose tough penalties against Tehran as part of his administra­tion's “maximum pressure” policy.

The deal was agreed in 2015 between Iran, the United States, China, Russia, Britain, France and Germany. It offered sanctions relief in exchange for curbs on Tehran's nuclear ambitions and guarantees it would not seek an atomic bomb. Iran maintains it has only pursued a civilian nuclear energy programme.

A new wave of US sanctions have hit hard Iran's vital oil sector and its internatio­nal banking ties, plunging the economy into a recession.

But Tehran has signalled it could be willing to engage the new White House administra­tion while rhetoric from officials in Moscow has suggested a change in tack in Washington from the Trump administra­tion.

Joe Biden's pick for secretary of state, Anthony Blinken, said at a Senate confirmati­on hearing this month that Trump's policies had made Iran “more dangerous”. While Blinken confirmed Biden's desire for Washington to return to the nuclear agreement, both sides have said the other must return to full compliance before the accord is implemente­d again.

Since the deal began unravellin­g with the US exit, Russia and European signatorie­s have advocated efforts to salvage the accord and cautioned Iran against bolstering its nuclear enrichment.

Russia's Deputy Foreign Minister Sergei Ryabkov in December urged Iran to take “maximum responsibi­lity” after Tehran announced plans to install advanced centrifuge­s in its main nuclear enrichment plant.

The ministry earlier this month blamed Iran's departure from norms of the nuclear deal on “systematic crude violations” by the United States.

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