The Jerusalem Post

Quest for more leverage drives Iran’s nuclear stalling tactic, analysts say

- • By PARISA HAFEZI

dubaI (reuters) – Western powers have been trying for weeks to get tehran’s answer to one question: “When will the Islamic republic return to nuclear talks that have been on hold since june?” Iran’s response has been vague and simple: “soon.”

behind tehran’s stalling is an attempt to gain leverage to extract more concession­s when negotiatio­ns do eventually resume, officials and analysts said, including by advancing its uranium enrichment program, a possible pathway to a nuclear bomb.

Iran has long denied seeking to weaponize nuclear energy.

the talks, which aim to bring both Washington and tehran back into compliance with a 2015 nuclear pact aimed at curbing the Iranian enrichment program, were adjourned in june after hardline cleric ebrahim raisi was elected Iran’s president.

“Iran will eventually return to the talks in Vienna. but we are in no rush to do so because time is on our side. our nuclear advances further every day,” a senior Iranian official said on condition of anonymity.

ali Vaez, senior analyst on the Islamic republic at the Internatio­nal crisis Group, said, “more time equals more leverage, given the exponentia­l growth of Iran’s nuclear program.”

While china and russia, closer trading partners of Iran, are more restrained, Western parties to the pact can scarcely conceal their frustratio­n.

the united states and european powers have urged Iran to resume talks, saying the diplomatic window would not stay open forever as tehran’s nuclear program is advancing well beyond the limits set by the 2015 pact.

the nuclear agreement limited Iran’s uranium enrichment activity to make it harder for tehran to develop nuclear arms, in return for lifting internatio­nal sanctions.

but former us president donald trump ditched the deal in 2018, saying it did not do enough to curb Iran’s nuclear activities, ballistic missile program and regional influence, and reimposed sanctions that have crippled Iran’s economy.

In response, tehran breached the deal by rebuilding stockpiles of enriched uranium, refining it to higher fissile purity and installing advanced centrifuge­s to speed up output.

“they keep saying they are going to come back to the table. but when they say soon... it means absolutely nothing,” said a senior european diplomat.

“that doesn’t mean we think they don’t want to come back, but we think they want their cake and to eat it. they want to create a fait accompli on the ground – technical and nuclear – and preserve the possibilit­y of a negotiatio­n.”

emboldened by the chaotic us withdrawal from afghanista­n, Iran’s rulers are confident their stalling strategy will not bring serious repercussi­ons, analysts said, especially when us president joe biden is embroiled in a growing rivalry with china and battling a coVId-19 crisis at home.

In contrast, the biden administra­tion is signaling that Iran should take nothing for granted.

top us officials will tell visiting Israeli counterpar­ts in Washington on tuesday they are committed to diplomacy but would be prepared to pursue “other avenues” to ensure tehran does not acquire a nuclear weapon, a senior us official said.

Israel says it will not allow tehran to get a nuclear bomb.

the man with ultimate authority in Iran, supreme leader ayatollah ali Khamenei, has blamed the united states for the pause in the talks.

“ayatollah

Khamenei seems to believe that by waiting, he can get a better deal from Washington. that time is on his side,” said meir javedanfar, Iran lecturer at Israel’s reichman university.

tehran and Washington still disagree on which steps need to be taken and when, with the key issues being what nuclear limits tehran will accept and what sanctions Washington will remove.

the fact that indirect talks between tehran and Washington paused after the election of raisi was a sign of tehran’s plan “to press for major concession­s” from the united states, said a former Iranian official.

“the establishm­ent is also weighing different tactics to get more and give less in return. It takes time to determine their strategy,” he said.

naming ali bagheri Kani, an ardent critic of the 2015 pact, to replace former pragmatist chief nuclear negotiator abbas araqchi, signals tehran will take an uncompromi­sing approach when the talks resume, eurasia Group analyst henry rome said.

In addition to seeking the lifting of trump-era sanctions in a verifiable process, tehran also wants Washington to remove Iran’s revolution­ary Guards from a terrorism blacklist.

It also wants europe to guarantee foreign investors will return, and assurances that Washington will not renege on the deal again.

For his part, biden wants to restore the pact’s nuclear limits and, if possible, extend them while pushing back against what he has called Iran’s other destabiliz­ing activities.

sanam Vakil, deputy director of chatham house’s middle east and north africa program, said Iran would “win” if it gained further concession­s from Washington, but should the deal collapse Iran’s rulers sense that they could survive through “maximum resistance,” a reference to economic self-reliance.

however, Iran’s foot-dragging strategy could weaken the country’s clerical rulers by further hurting an economy already grappling with squeezed oil revenues.

the authoritie­s fear a re-eruption of unrest among its core supporters – lower-income Iranians – whose periodic bouts of protest in recent years reminded them how vulnerable they could be to popular anger over economic hardships.

“a failure to revive the nuclear deal entails real economic risk for Iran... but politics trumps economics right now,” rome said.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Israel