Los Angeles Times (Sunday)

A hint of possible opening with Iran

The foreign minister suggests flexibilit­y on one nuclear deal issue, but later reverses.

- Associated press

TEHRAN — Iran’s top diplomat said Saturday that the country’s paramilita­ry Islamic Revolution­ary Guard accepted the idea of continuing to be sanctioned by the U.S. if it meant the restoratio­n of Tehran’s nuclear deal with world powers.

Iranian Foreign Minister Hossein Amir-Abdollahia­n’s remark in a state television interview may signal a possible opening over the stalemated Vienna talks. It also appeared timed for a visit Sunday by a European Union diplomat involved in the negotiatio­ns.

Sanctions on the Revolution­ary Guard have been one of the remaining sticking points over restoring the tattered nuclear deal, outside of Russia’s demand at the eleventh hour of guarantees over its trade relationsh­ip with Iran amid Moscow’s war on Ukraine.

The Revolution­ary Guard represents one of the major power bases in the Shiite theocracy and is answerable only to Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei.

In the interview, AmirAbdoll­ahian acknowledg­ed that the Revolution­ary Guard sanctions were a topic discussed.

“High-rank Islamic Revolution­ary Guard Corps officials in the country always remind us at the Ministry of Foreign Affairs of a point, and they say that you should do whatever is necessary for the interests of the country,” he said. “If you reach a point where the Islamic Revolution­ary Guard Corps issue was raised, the Islamic Revolution­ary Guard Corps issue should not be an obstacle for you.”

He added: “In my opinion, the high-ranking officials of the Islamic Revolution­ary Guard Corps are showing and raising their self-sacrifice to the highest level.”

Though Amir-Abdollahia­n later said he wouldn’t negotiate on the Revolution­ary Guard sanctions, the remark Saturday represents the first time he or any other Iranian official suggested the issue could be traded away in the negotiatio­ns. It came as Spanish diplomat Enrique Mora, who has been the EU’s lead negotiator in the talks, was traveling to Iran for meetings Sunday.

Earlier Saturday in Qatar, EU foreign policy chief Josep Borrell said all sides were “very close to an agreement” for a roadmap restoring the 2015 nuclear deal, which saw Iran limit its enrichment of uranium in exchange for the lifting of economic sanctions. The deal collapsed in 2018 when President Trump withdrew America from the accord.

“I hope it will be possible, because now we are discussing about [a] collateral issue which has nothing to do with the core of the nuclear deal,” Borrell said. “The work has been hard and we are reaching an end.”

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