Los Angeles Times

Iran nuclear talks off to ‘constructi­ve’ start

Reviving deal requires complex diplomacy to woo hard-liners in Tehran and Congress.

- By Tracy Wilkinson

WASHINGTON — With tempered expectatio­ns, the U.S., Iran and five other world powers began “constructi­ve” talks Tuesday aimed at reviving the 2015 nuclear deal that reined in Tehran’s weapons ambitions but whose resuscitat­ion will require a complicate­d diplomacy appeasing both Iranian hard-liners and American members of Congress.

The meeting in the Austrian capital, Vienna, is the first contact the United States and Iran have had in years, although it is through “proximity talks,” where the representa­tives of each country don’t actually sit in the same room.

Day One was “constructi­ve,” the European Union chief coordinato­r, Enrique Mora, said. “There’s unity and ambition for a joint diplomatic process with two expert groups on nuclear implementa­tion and sanc

tions-lifting,” he said. European officials are serving as go-betweens for the American and Iranian delegation­s.

The two “expert groups” represent the two areas of central disagreeme­nt: What must Iran do to return to compliance with the nuclear deal after having stepped up its enrichment of uranium, and what must the U.S. do to ease the hundreds of sanctions that the previous administra­tion placed on Tehran to cripple its economy and isolate it diplomatic­ally. Former President Trump unilateral­ly withdrew from the landmark accord in 2018.

Despite the formidable hurdles, the Biden administra­tion said the talks were an important first step.

“As a broad step forward, these discussion­s in Vienna ... [are] a welcome step, a constructi­ve step, a potentiall­y useful step,” State Department spokesman Ned Price said Tuesday.

The talks in Vienna, which Price said could continue at least through the week, involve Russia, China, Germany, the United Kingdom and France, as well as the European Union, the signatorie­s to the deal that was negotiated after years of often secret talks. President Obama signed on through executive measures, but never got congressio­nal approval.

The U.S. delegation in Vienna is being led by President Biden’s special envoy for Iran, veteran diplomat Robert Malley, who acknowledg­ed the difficulty of winning the support of Congress.

“Hope springs eternal,” Malley told NPR earlier Tuesday. “We’ll work as closely as we can with Congress. And this is a very polarizing issue. We understand that.”

He pledged that once Iran and the U.S. are back in the deal, the administra­tion will address the objections that many in Washington have: that the deal did not curtail other belligeren­t Iranian activities such as support for militant groups in the region. The administra­tion will then push for what Biden calls a “stronger, longer” deal.

“The Biden administra­tion made a miscalcula­tion in delaying this process. But Vienna is an opportunit­y for a course correction,” said Suzanne DiMaggio, a senior fellow at the Carnegie Endowment for Internatio­nal Peace. “We have more leverage going back into the deal than we do out of it. Right now we have no leverage.”

For the United States, a major complicati­on comes in the sanctions. Many, which prevent Iran from selling oil on the internatio­nal market or participat­ing in global banking systems, are directly tied to the nuclear question. Those can be eased relatively simply.

But the Trump administra­tion added hundreds of sanctions on Iran based on purported terrorism or human rights violations, which will be much more difficult — politicall­y and technicall­y — for Biden to lift.

Trump opted for what his government called a “maximum pressure campaign” that progressiv­ely tightened the screws on the Islamic Republic but failed to alter its behavior.

The Iranian supreme leader has publicly taken a “maximalist” position demanding a full lifting of all sanctions. But on Tuesday, Iran’s lead negotiator in Vienna, Abbas Araghchi, deputy foreign minister, struck an unusually positive note, saying the first round of talks were “on the right track.”

“It’s too soon to say it has been successful,” he told Iranian television.

In late February, Iran began restrictin­g internatio­nal inspection­s of its nuclear facilities, but under a last-minute deal worked out during a trip to Tehran by Rafael Grossi, the head of the Vienna-based U.N. atomic watchdog, some access was preserved.

Under the agreement, Iran will no longer share surveillan­ce footage of its nuclear facilities with the Internatio­nal Atomic Energy Agency, but it has promised to preserve the tapes for three months. It will then hand them over to the IAEA if it is granted sanctions relief. Otherwise, Iran has vowed to erase the recordings, narrowing the window for a diplomatic breakthrou­gh.

Iranian Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif in March also urged the U.S. to act quickly, noting that as his country’s June elections approach, Washington will find itself dealing with a government unable to make progress in the nuclear talks.

In addition, one of the deal’s major so-called sunset clauses, a United Nations arms embargo on Iran, expired last year and others are set to expire in the coming years.

The small window for negotiatio­n will make it even more difficult for the U.S. to try to bring new concerns into the deal, such as Iran’s regional influence and its ballistic missile program.

White House Press Secretary Jen Psaki said Tuesday that there was value to having U.S. diplomats in Vienna even though they won’t be in direct talks with Iran.

“I think it’s important to convey to our partners ... that we believe diplomacy is the best step forward,” Psaki said.

‘We’ll work as closely as we can with Congress. And this is a very polarizing issue. We understand that.’ — Robert Malley,

President Biden’s special envoy for Iran

 ?? Florian Schroetter Associated Press ?? IRAN’S lead negotiator in Vienna, Abbas Araghchi, right, arrives for the talks at the Grand Hotel Wien. The deputy foreign minister later struck an unusually positive note, saying negotiatio­ns were “on the right track.”
Florian Schroetter Associated Press IRAN’S lead negotiator in Vienna, Abbas Araghchi, right, arrives for the talks at the Grand Hotel Wien. The deputy foreign minister later struck an unusually positive note, saying negotiatio­ns were “on the right track.”

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