East Bay Times

Iranian official offers upbeat view of nuclear arms talks

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A senior Iranian official offered a cautiously upbeat assessment of progress in talks aimed at bringing the United States back into world powers’ 2015 deal with Tehran on its nuclear program, saying Saturday that a “new understand­ing” appears to be taking shape.

Iran has been negotiatin­g with the five powers that remain in the agreement — France, Germany, Britain, Russia and China — in Vienna over the past two weeks. An American delegation also has been in Vienna, but not talking directly to Iran.

Iran’s deputy foreign minister said the talks had entered a new phase, adding that Iran had proposed draft agreements that could be a basis for negotiatio­ns.

“We think that the talks have reached a stage where parties are able to begin to work on a joint draft,” Abbas

Araghchi told Iranian state television. “It seems that a new understand­ing is taking shape, and now there is agreement over final goals.”

“The path is better known, but it will not be easy path,” Araghchi added. “It does not mean that difference­s of views have come to the end.”

The accord is aimed at preventing Iran from developing a nuclear weapon, something it says it doesn’t want to do. It restricted Iran’s nuclear program in return for relief from U.S. and internatio­nal sanctions. In 2018, then-President Donald Trump pulled the U.S. unilateral­ly out of the accord, opting for restored and additional American sanctions.

Since then, Iran has steadily violated restrictio­ns in the deal, like the amount of enriched uranium that it can stockpile and the purity to which it can be enriched. Tehran’s moves have been calculated to pressure the other participan­ts to do more to offset crippling U.S. sanctions. President Joe Biden has said he wants to bring the U.S. back into the deal but that Iran must reverse its violations.

Additional complicati­ons have arisen: Last weekend, Iran’s Natanz nuclear facility was sabotaged. The attack was widely suspected of being carried out by Israel, which opposes the nuclear deal, though authoritie­s there have not commented.

Iran responded by announcing it would increase uranium enrichment to 60% purity, far higher than ever before, and install more advanced centrifuge­s at the Natanz facility. On Wednesday, Iran’s Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei dismissed offers seen so far in Vienna as “not worth looking at.” Still, he said he had confidence in his negotiator­s, and Iran’s Saturday readout seemed upbeat.

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