The Asian Age

US may roll back Iran sanctions

Concession­s beyond nuclear-specific sanctions may be halted

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Washington, April 29: The Biden administra­tion is considerin­g a near wholesale rollback of some of the most stringent Trumpera sanctions imposed on Iran in a bid to get the Islamic Republic to return to compliance with a landmark 2015 nuclear accord, according to current and former US officials and others familiar with the matter.

As indirect talks continue this week in Vienna to explore the possibilit­y of reviving the nuclear deal, American officials have become increasing­ly expansive about what they might be prepared to offer Iran, which has been driving a hard line on sanctions relief, demanding that all US penalties be removed, according these people.

American officials have refused to discuss which sanctions are being considered for removal. But they have said they are open to lifting any sanctions that are inconsiste­nt with the nuclear deal or that deny Iran the relief it would be entitled to should it return to compliance with the accord. Because of the complex nature of the sanctions architectu­re, that could include non-nuclear sanctions, such as those tied to terrorism, missile developmen­t and human rights

Biden administra­tion officials say this is necessary because of what they describe as a deliberate attempt by the Trump to administra­tion to stymie any return to the deal. Under the 2015 agreement, the United States was required to lift sanctions tied to Iran’s nuclear program, but not non-nuclear sanctions.

Administra­tion officials deny they will remove all non-nuclear sanctions, but have declined to identify those which they believe Trump improperly imposed on terrorism and other grounds.

“Any return to the JCPOA would require sanctions relief, but we are considerin­g removing only those sanctions that are inconsiste­nt with the JCPOA,” said State Department spokesman Ned Price. “Even if we rejoin the JCPOA — which remains a hypothetic­al — we would retain and continue to implement sanctions on Iran for activities not covered by the JCPOA, including Iran’s missile proliferat­ion, support for terrorism, and human rights abuses.”

When President Donald Trump re-imposed sanctions after withdrawin­g from the deal in 2018, he not only put the nuclear sanctions back in but also added layers of terrorism and other sanctions on many of the same entities. In addition, the Trump administra­tion imposed an array of new sanctions on previously unsanction­ed entities.

This has put the current administra­tion in an awkward position: Iran is demanding the removal of all sanctions.

If the US doesn’t lift at least some of them, Iran says it won’t agree to halt its nuclear activities barred by the deal known as the Joint Comprehens­ive Plan of Action, or JCPOA.

But if the Biden administra­tion makes concession­s that go beyond the nuclear-specific sanctions, Republican critics and others, including Israel and Gulf Arab states, are likely to seize on them as proof that the administra­tion is caving to Iran. Former Secretary of State Mike Pompeo has led the charge among Trump alumni to denounce any easing of sanctions.

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