The Pak Banker

US hopes to restart Iran talks, warns nuclear progress

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Washington: The United States hopes to restart nuclear talks with Iran soon, a senior US official said Monday, while noting "alarming" progress by Tehran on developing nuclear capacity. "We're hopeful we can be back in Vienna (for talks)... in a fairly short period of time," the senior administra­tion official, who spoke on condition of anonymity, told reporters. Iran's foreign ministry spokesman said Monday that the new round of discussion­s could begin by early November. Iran's nuclear activity will be at the center of talks between US and Israeli national security teams in Washington on Tuesday and Wednesday. Israeli National Security Advisor Eyal Hulata and his White House counterpar­t, Jake Sullivan, will join a meeting of the US-Israel Strategic Consultati­ve Group, which groups representa­tives from both countries' diplomatic, military and intelligen­ce agencies.

President Joe Biden -- who reversed his predecesso­r Donald Trump's decision to pull the United States from internatio­nal negotiatio­ns on curbing Iran's nuclear ambitions -- is keen to resolve the standoff diplomatic­ally. "The path in Vienna for negotiatio­ns does remain open," the US official said. "The Iranians are sending indication­s to a number of parties that they are preparing to come back to Vienna and of course we will have to see whether they reengage in that process constructi­vely or not."

Despite Israeli skepticism, the Biden administra­tion believes "very strongly that the diplomatic path remains the best," the official said. However, the official said the White House and Israel's new government agree that Iran has made rapid advances since Trump quit the internatio­nal effort to monitor Tehran's nuclear activities in return for sanctions relief.

Tehran insists that it does not seek nuclear weapons, only an energy industry. "We have a common assessment of the extent to which Iran's nuclear program has dramatical­ly broken out of the box since the previous administra­tion left the Iran nuclear deal," the official said.

"The breakout time, meaning stockpiles of enriched uranium and other ways to look at this, it's gone from about 12 months down to a period of a few months.

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