Manawatu Standard

Signs of thaw on nuclear standoff

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The US and Iran edged closer to ending their standoff over the nuclear deal, with Washington describing talks as ‘‘constructi­ve’’ and the Islamic Republic signalling that it was ready to debate the details of how the two sides will practicall­y revive the stricken 2015 accord.

Jake Sullivan, United States National Security adviser, said yesterday ‘‘the talks in Vienna have been constructi­ve in the sense that there is real effort underway there’’ and that world powers were focused on restoring the agreement on a ‘‘compliance for compliance’’ basis.

His comments come after Iran’s lead negotiator, Deputy Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi, injected fresh hope into the process on Sunday, by saying that a ‘‘new understand­ing’’ was taking shape at the talks and that his country would start work on a full draft text for negotiator­s to discuss. Negotiator­s, which include the European Union, Russia and China, have said the talks will continue this week.

World powers have been meeting in Vienna since April 9 to help the US and Iran map a path back to a restored nuclear deal and reduce tensions in the Persian Gulf. The talks were almost derailed last week after Iran’s biggest uranium enrichment facility was severely damaged in an attack it blamed on Israel. In response, the Islamic Republic dramatical­ly increased the levels at which it is enriching uranium – to 60 per cent from 20 per cent – meaning that it is closer than ever before to obtaining weapons-grade fissile material. President Joe Biden sharply criticised the move but pledged to continue talks.

Iran wants the US to remove hundreds of sanctions that former President Donald Trump imposed on its economy after he took office in January 2017, including those that he reinstated when he broke away from the nuclear deal. Araghchi said on Sunday Iran wants all the penalties that it expects the US to remove, to be formally listed and agreed on.

Tehran insists that the US must take these measures before Iran agrees to scale back its atomic activity back to within the original terms of the nuclear deal. Yesterday Sullivan said sanctions would be lifted once the US has ‘‘clarity and confidence’’ that the Islamic Republic will reduce its nuclear work, heavily curtail enrichment and atomic activity.

‘‘Until we have confidence in all of those things the United States is not going to make any concession­s at all,’’ he said.

The nuclear deal, which imposed strict limits on Iran’s nuclear program in exchange for sanctions relief, was a signature achievemen­t of the Obama administra­tion. Abandonmen­t of the accord by Trump kept relations between the longstandi­ng foes close to breaking point and convulsed the Persian Gulf with assassinat­ions, attacks on energy installati­ons and tanker seizures.

The Islamic republic began in 2019 to gradually increase its atomic activity – enriching uranium beyond the limit of 3.67 per cent allowed in the deal – in response to Trump’s so-called ‘‘maximum pressure’’ strategy.

 ?? AP ?? Centrifuge machines line a hall at the Natanz Uranium Enrichment Facility, 320km south of Tehran.
AP Centrifuge machines line a hall at the Natanz Uranium Enrichment Facility, 320km south of Tehran.

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