New York Post

ISRAELI PM: NOT AGAIN

Rips new Iran talks

- By MARK MOORE

Israeli Prime Minister Naftali Bennett on Monday warned the five countries that have resumed negotiatio­ns over the defunct 2015 Iran nuclear deal not to be taken in by Tehran’s “nuclear blackmail.”

“Such a murderous regime should not be rewarded,” Bennett said in a statement, and pleaded with world leaders not to allow “hundreds of billions of dollars poured right into their rotten regime.”

“Iran deserves no rewards, no bargain deals and no sanctions relief in return for their brutality,” Bennett said, the Jerusalem Post reported. “I call upon our allies around the world: Do not give in to Iran’s nuclear blackmail.”

As talks resume in Vienna after a five-month hiatus, Iran has demanded that sanctions imposed by former President Donald Trump as part of a “maximum pressure campaign” be lifted.

The discussion­s that began Monday involve the five world powers that joined the US in signing the deal six years ago — France, Germany, Britain, Russia and China.

The US has sat out the meetings, though an American delegation led by special envoy for Iran Robert Malley is participat­ing indirectly.

In a speech in October, Malley suggested the US would be open to lifting “all of the sanctions that were imposed by the Trump administra­tion that were inconsiste­nt with the [nuclear] deal, and therefore we could get back to the business that we should have been on.”

“That’s where we are today, and I think that’s the choice that Iran faces,” Malley said at an event hosted by the Carnegie Endowment for Internatio­nal Peace. “Are they prepared to go back to that or do they want to choose a different path?”

President Biden has said he wants to re-enter the agreement after Trump pulled the US out of the deal in 2018.

Iran Foreign Minister Hossein Amir-Abdollahia­n released a statement before the Vienna talks demanding an end to sanctions before the US can rejoin the discussion.

“The United States still fails to properly understand the fact that there is no way to return to the deal without verifiable and effective lifting of all sanctions imposed on the Iranian nation after the US departure,” he said.

Tehran has maintained that its nuclear program is designed for peaceful purposes, but since Trump withdrew the US from the deal, Iran has violated the limits of the accord by enriching uranium and installing more centrifuge­s.

Complicati­ng matters, Iran has limited the access United Nations nuclear inspectors have to monitor the program.

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