Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

High-level Iran nuke talks progressin­g, officials say

- COMPILED BY DEMOCRAT-GAZETTE STAFF FROM WIRE REPORTS

VIENNA — World powers held a fourth round of high-level talks Friday aimed at getting the United States back into the nuclear deal with Iran, with both sides signaling a willingnes­s to work out the stumbling blocks.

The talks began in Austria in early April. Russian delegate Mikhail Ulyanov tweeted after Friday’s meeting that “the participan­ts agreed on the need to intensify the process.” “The delegation­s seem to be ready to stay in Vienna as long as necessary to achieve the goal,” he wrote.

The deal could be revived in the next few weeks if Iran agrees to rein in atomic activities that have begun “galloping forward,” said a senior State Department official who asked not to be identified in exchange for discussing the negotiatio­ns.

Reactivati­ng the accord between world powers and Iran would rein in the Persian Gulf country’s rapidly expanding nuclear program in return for sanctions relief, substantia­lly lowering tensions across the Middle East. Iran’s currency has strength

ened on the back of rising expectatio­ns that the country could soon be able to resume internatio­nal trade, including the export of oil.

The U.S. pulled out of the 2015 deal unilateral­ly in 2018 after then-President Donald Trump said it needed to be renegotiat­ed.

The deal had promised Iran economic incentives in exchange for curbs on its nuclear program, and the Trump administra­tion reimposed strict sanctions on the Islamic republic in an unsuccessf­ul attempt to force Tehran into new talks.

Iran reacted by steadily increasing its violations of the deal by enriching uranium to a greater purity than permitted, stockpilin­g more enriched uranium than allowed and using more advanced centrifuge­s, among other moves to try to pressure the powers remaining in the deal — Germany, France, Britain, Russia and China — for economic relief.

President Joe Biden says he wants to rejoin the deal, known as the Joint Comprehens­ive Plan of Action, but that Iran needs to return to compliance.

Speaking to reporters Friday at the White House, Biden said he believed the Iranians were approachin­g the talks seriously.

“But how serious and what they’re prepared to do is a different story,” Biden said. “We’re still talking.”

The pact is meant to prevent Iran from obtaining a nuclear bomb, something the country insists it does not want to do, and the government in Tehran has said it is prepared to reverse all its violations but that Washington must remove all sanctions imposed under Trump.

Still unresolved is what Iran’s return to compliance would look like.

Delegates to the Vienna talks concede, for example, that Iranian nuclear scientists cannot unlearn the knowledge they acquired in the past three years, but it is not clear whether Iran’s new centrifuge­s would need to be destroyed, mothballed and locked away, or simply taken offline.

Because the U.S. is currently out of the deal, there were no American representa­tives at the talks. Diplomats involved are shuttling between the Iranian side and a delegation from Washington elsewhere in Vienna.

NOT ENOUGH

Iran’s delegate to the talks, Deputy Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi, told Iranian state television after the meeting that his impression was that all sides were committed to finding a solution.

“The reports that are being conveyed to us from Americans is that they are also serious about returning to JCPOA [Joint Comprehens­ive Plan of Action]. So far, they have announced that they are ready to lift most of their sanctions, but we do not think it is enough,” Araghchi said.

“That is why the negotiatio­ns will continue until we reach all our demands in this regard,” he added. “If our demands are met, Iran will be quite serious about returning to its obligation­s in the full implementa­tion of JCPOA.”

Between the high-level meetings in Vienna of the so-called Joint Commission, expert groups have been meeting to try to come up with solutions to the outstandin­g issues.

Alain Matton, a spokespers­on for the European Union delegation, which is chairing the meetings, said the expert discussion­s will continue in the days ahead.

“And the EU as a coordinato­r and facilitato­r of the JCPOA talks will continue with separate talks with all participan­ts and with the U.S.,” Matton told reporters.

The participan­ts are continuing with discussion­s, which are held on various levels and which have as their objective the full and effective implementa­tion of the deal by all sides and the U.S. return to the JCPOA.”

Ahead of the talks, a senior U.S. official, speaking on condition of anonymity, said Washington has laid out the concession­s it’s prepared to make and that success or failure now depends on Iran making the political decision to accept those concession­s and to return to compliance with the accord.

The official said it remains possible to reach an agreement before Iran’s June presidenti­al election, which some believe is a complicati­ng factor in the discussion­s.

The May 22 expiration of a provisiona­l atomic monitoring arrangemen­t between Iran and the Internatio­nal Atomic Energy Agency has also infused the negotiatio­ns with a sense of urgency.

A decision to rejoin the deal would arguably be Biden’s most consequent­ial foreign policy move a little more than 100 days into office. The agreement with Iran has riven the U.S. from some Middle East allies and deeply divided domestic politics.

After entering the 2015 deal, then-President Barack Obama said the alternativ­e might have been a military conflict with major disruption­s to the global economy.

The warning still hangs over negotiator­s as negotiator­s try to defuse tensions that have threatened to tip the region into war and led to attacks on shipping in waters critical for oil shipments. Iran responded by ramping up its uranium enrichment, reaching levels near what’s needed for a nuclear weapon.

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