Las Vegas Review-Journal

Biden must undo his predecesso­r’s original sin on the Iran nuclear deal

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On Tuesday, representa­tives of the United States, Iran and several other nations will gather in Vienna to try to revive the 2015 agreement that placed significan­t obstacles in the path of Iran developing nuclear weapons.

Unfortunat­ely, the U.S. and Iranian representa­tives aren’t expected to engage in direct negotiatio­ns. That’s one sign of how difficult it will be to reinvigora­te the Joint Comprehens­ive Plan of Action, which President Donald Trump recklessly repudiated in 2018.

President Joe Biden must make it clear that his administra­tion is willing to move quickly to lift the sanctions reimposed by Trump if Iran agrees to return to full compliance with the agreement. And he and his diplomats should be open to creative ways to have the U.S. and Iran act simultaneo­usly to fulfill their obligation­s.

The stakes are high — a nuclear-armed Iran would be deeply destabiliz­ing and could lead to a regional nuclear arms race — and time may be running out. Iran will hold a presidenti­al election in June to replace incumbent President Hassan Rouhani, who cannot run for a third consecutiv­e term. Rouhani was considered by some analysts to be less of a hardliner than the conservati­ves who now dominate the Iranian parliament; his successor could be more resistant to complying with the agreement even if the U.S. lifted sanctions.

The Obama administra­tion negotiated the 2015 agreement with Iran, the four other permanent

members of the United Nations Security Council, Germany and the European Union. Iran agreed to significan­t limitation­s on its nuclear program — including inspection­s by internatio­nal atomic energy experts — in exchange for the lifting of economic sanctions.

Despite evidence that Iran was complying with its obligation­s, Trump withdrew from the agreement, not coincident­ally dismantlin­g one of the major achievemen­ts of his immediate predecesso­r. Iran reacted by intensifyi­ng its uranium enrichment program well beyond the limits set by the 2015 deal and curtailing access

by internatio­nal inspectors.

During last year’s presidenti­al campaign, Biden said the United States would rejoin the Joint Comprehens­ive Plan if Iran returned to strict compliance. But his comments left the impression in some minds that Iran had to act first.

Constraini­ng Iran’s nuclear program is too important an objective to be blocked by a dispute over whether Iran or the U.S. makes the first move. Surely diplomats are ingenious enough to arrange for simultaneo­us declaratio­ns by the two countries that they are taking steps to return to compliance.

On Monday, a State Department

spokesman said the purpose of the Vienna conversati­ons was to set the stage for a “mutual return to compliance,” but he also said the U.S. wouldn’t “cut corners.” Certainly deft diplomacy will be necessary, but the administra­tion shouldn’t let the talks drag on endlessly.

Historical context is important here. It was the U.S. that began the underminin­g of the nuclear deal. The Trump administra­tion went on to engage in a policy of “maximum pressure” on Iran, a scorchedea­rth campaign of economic sanctions that seemed like an attempt at regime change. That policy proved a dismal failure, even as it took a heavy toll on the Iranian people.

Given that history, it’s not surprising that Iran is skeptical of U.S. intentions. But if Biden is committed to reversing Trump’s blunder, he must go the extra mile to demonstrat­e that he supports the 2015 agreement. That includes pushing back at members of Congress who never supported it in the first place.

The Biden administra­tion would like to build on the deal with what Secretary of State Antony Blinken calls a “longer and stronger” agreement. The administra­tion has further concerns about Iran’s ballistic missile program and its support for militant groups elsewhere in the Middle East.

But the best way to engage Iran on these other issues is to undo the original sin of Trump’s repudiatio­n of the Joint Comprehens­ive Plan — so that Iran has no excuse to violate it.

 ?? EVAN VUCCI / ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Secretary of State Antony Blinken speaks Feb. 4 at the State Department in Washington. Blinken said the United States is prepared to return to the Iran nuclear deal if Tehran shows “strict compliance” with it.
EVAN VUCCI / ASSOCIATED PRESS Secretary of State Antony Blinken speaks Feb. 4 at the State Department in Washington. Blinken said the United States is prepared to return to the Iran nuclear deal if Tehran shows “strict compliance” with it.

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