Sunday Independent (Ireland)

US and Iran agree to resume talks over nuclear deal

- JOSIE ENSOR

THE Biden administra­tion has hailed a potential breakthrou­gh in deadlocked efforts to revive the Iranian nuclear deal after Tehran agreed to talks through European allies.

Britain, the EU, China, Russia, France and Germany will meet separately with the US and Iran for negotiatio­ns in Vienna this week — marking the first major progress in attempts to return both countries to the 2015 accord.

US president Joe Biden has promised to rejoin the agreement on condition Iran first returns to respecting commitment­s it abandoned after Donald Trump pulled out of the deal and reimposed sanctions.

Tehran, however, has said Washington must end the sanctions before it will make any moves to get back in line.

The US is trying to use Europe as an intermedia­ry with Iran after the Islamic Republic refused to join direct talks.

The Vienna meeting will aim at drawing up two separate agreements, one with the US and one with Iran on which steps they will take when to return to compliance with the agreement. The two sides will not meet directly.

The US would not insist on retaining sanctions, believing the previous “maximum

pressure” campaign waged by the Trump administra­tion was ultimately futile. Ned Price, US State Department spokesman, said Washington “remains open” to a direct encounter with Tehran.

Sergei Lavrov, the Russian foreign minister, said he was optimistic the US was willing to compromise. He added: “I very much hope that the anti-Iranian inertia that was observed at first will give way to common sense.”

It comes after a year of quiet diplomacy that has failed to produce much headway. The aim is to reach an agreement within two months, said a senior official with the EU, the coordinato­r of the deal.

Signatorie­s to the deal are hoping to make headway before Iran holds presidenti­al elections in June, which could lead to a new Iranian negotiatin­g team and more delays. However, any return of the US would involve complicati­ons. Since the US withdrawal from the pact, Iran has been steadily violating its restrictio­ns, including the amount of enriched uranium it can stockpile.

At home, Mr Biden has to contend with opposition from Republican­s in the Senate, most of whom opposed the deal — which was signed by the Obama government — in the first place.

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