The Jerusalem Post

Rouhani rules out bilateral talks with US unless sanctions lifted

Threatens further cut to commitment­s • Stonewalls IAEA investigat­ion

- • By ANNA AHRONHEIM

Iran will not agree to bilateral negotiatio­ns with the United States until all sanctions are lifted, Iranian President Hassan Rouhani said on Tuesday. He also threatened to further cut commitment­s to the crumbling nuclear deal called the Joint Comprehens­ive Plan of Action (JCPOA). “We’ve said it before time and again, and we say it again: we have no intention to hold bilateral talks with the United States,” Rouhani was quoted as saying by Iran’s Mehr News Agency during a parliament session in Tehran. “We never did and never will. This has been the case in the past year

and a half, and even in previous years. There have been calls for talks, but we never responded to them. When we talk about negotiatio­ns, we only mean it under the situation where all sanctions have been lifted – that is, the situation we previously had under the JCPOA. Our stance is clear.”

He said were Washington to lift all sanctions it imposed on Tehran after it unilateral­ly withdrew from the JCPOA, then there could be multilater­al talks with the remaining signatorie­s, the UK, France, Germany, China and Russia.

“We said that the US, as part of the 5+1, held talks with us and we took part in the talks,” said Rouhani. “If the US lifts all of its sanctions against Iran – [and] whether it returns to the JCPOA or not it does not matter to us – but if it lifts all sanctions, it is still possible for the US to be part of the 5+1, granted that it first removes all sanctions.”

Sanctions put in place by Trump caused the value of Iran’s currency to plummet and sent inflation soaring. Though Iran’s economy has improved since the signing of the deal in 2015, the average Iranian has

not felt it, with high unemployme­nt and growing inflation due to the sanctions, with a 165% rise in the prices of bananas over the past year, 50% in the prices of meat, 103% in the prices of tomatoes, and 15% for housing.

When Trump tightened sanctions on Iranian oil exports in July in an attempt to force Tehran to negotiate, Iran suspended two commitment­s to the deal, increased its enriched uranium stockpile to over 300 kg., and began enriching uranium to purity rates beyond the JCPOA limit.

On Monday, Rouhani threatened to take a third step by Thursday if the other signatorie­s to the deal “can’t live up to their part of the commitment­s.”

“The further we move along this path, it may make solving the issue more difficult, but since our steps are designed in a way that we can return to the starting point at any given time we desire, it will not take any time, and we will continue our talks even after taking the third step,” he said, adding that “the basis of our talks with the European side is that we want them to pre-purchase our oil and the revenues to be in our possession. This will ease the situation for us to decide against making more cuts to our commitment­s to the JCPOA.”

Also on Monday, The Wall Street Journal reported that Iran is not cooperatin­g with the Internatio­nal Atomic Energy Agency regarding claims first made by Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu last year that Tehran still has equipment and material used in the past for work on nuclear weapons.

According to Netanyahu, the secret site looks like a “dilapidate­d warehouse” on the outskirts

of the capital that contained up to 300 tons of nuclear-related material. He called on the internatio­nal community to immediatel­y inspect the site.

Unnamed diplomats quoted in the report said that Iran has refused to answer requests for clarificat­ion by the IAEA over the alleged rebuilding of a dismantled site in Tehran, causing the agency to supposedly say that it would publicly criticize Iran for its lack of cooperatio­n.

Iran’s stonewalli­ng of the inspection marks the first time the Islamic Republic has refused to cooperate with the IAEA on the monitoring of its nuclear activities since 2016.

Israel considers Iran’s nuclear program as its No. 1 concern. According to recent intelligen­ce assessment­s, if the Islamic Republic does decide to renege on the agreement, it would take it one year to produce enough fissionabl­e material to make a nuclear bomb.

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