Pakistan Today (Lahore)

IRAN NUCLEAR TALKS RESTART AMID STRAINS OVER ENRICHMENT MOVE, NATANZ ATTACK

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IRAN and global powers resumed talks on Thursday to rescue the 2015 nuclear deal in an effort potentiall­y complicate­d by Tehran’s decision to ramp up uranium enrichment and what it called Israeli sabotage at a nuclear site.

Casting a shadow over the Vienna talks, Tehran on Tuesday announced its decision to enrich uranium at 60 per cent purity, a big step closer to the 90 per cent that is weapons-grade material, in response to an explosion at its key Natanz facility on Sunday.

Calling the move “provocativ­e”, the United States and the European parties to the deal warned that Tehran’s enrichment move was contrary to efforts to revive the accord abandoned by Washington three years ago.

Tehran’s refusal to hold direct talks with its old adversary the US forced European intermedia­ries to shuttle between separate hotels in Vienna last week when Iran and the other signatorie­s held what they described as a first round of “constructi­ve” talks to salvage the pact.

“Don’t worry about Iran. We have always remained committed to our obligation­s,” Rouhani said in a televised cabinet meeting on Thursday.

“Even today, if we wish, we can enrich uranium at 90 per cent purity. But we are not seeking a nuclear bomb ... If others return to full compliance with the deal ... we will stop 60 per cent and 20 per cent enrichment.” SANCTIONS: The 2015 deal was designed to make it harder for Iran to develop an atomic bomb – an ambition Tehran denies – in return for lifting sanctions.

Highlighti­ng Western concerns, a senior diplomat said that while the desire was to make progress, Iran’s latest violation could not be ignored and made efforts to achieve a breakthrou­gh before the June 18 Iranian presidenti­al election harder.

“The seriousnes­s of Iran’s latest decisions has hurt this process and raised tensions,” said the senior Western diplomat.

“We will have to see how in the coming days we address these violations with the will to press ahead in the talks.”

The deal’s remaining parties – Iran, Britain, China, France, Germany and Russia – have agreed to form two expert-level groups whose job is to marry lists of sanctions that the United States could lift with nuclear obligation­s Iran should meet.

A delegate at the talks said that events in Natanz should not distract, and that this round needed to focus on what the Americans were actually prepared to do.

“They still have not said what they mean,” the delegate said. “We need the Americans to say which sanctions they are prepared to lift.”

Tehran has repeatedly said that all sanctions must be rescinded first, warning that it may stop negotiatio­ns if the measures are not lifted. Washington wants Iran to reverse the breaches of the deal that it made in retaliatio­n for tough sanctions imposed by former US president Donald Trump.

“We will underline that Tehran does not want to hold corrosive negotiatio­ns. Our aim is not just talks for talks. In case of having a constructi­ve outcome, we will continue the negotiatio­ns. Otherwise the talks will stop,” Iran’s top nuclear negotiator Abbas Araqchi told state TV.

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