San Francisco Chronicle - (Sunday)

Biden, allies seek pathway to revive nuclear compact

- By Justin Sink and Ania Nussbaum Justin Sink and Ania Nussbaum are Bloomberg News writers.

President Biden and the leaders of Germany, France and the U.K. said they still see a chance to revive a deal with Iran over its nuclear program, but that Tehran must change course before any relief on sanctions.

“We are convinced that it remains possible to quickly reach and implement an understand­ing on return to full compliance to ensure for the long term that Iran’s nuclear program is exclusivel­y for peaceful purposes, and to provide sanctions lifting with long-lasting implicatio­ns for Iran’s economic growth,” the leaders said in a joint statement after meeting Saturday during the Group of 20 summit in Rome. “This will only be possible if Iran changes course.”

The leaders also said Iran’s production of highly enriched uranium and decreased cooperatio­n with internatio­nal oversight was “alarming.” They appealed to Iran’s news president, Ebrahim Raisi, to seize the opportunit­y but offered no details on a timetable.

Before the meeting, Biden posed for photograph­s with British Prime Minister Boris Johnson, French President Emmanuel Macron and outgoing German Chancellor Angela Merkel.

Asked when he wanted the talks to resume, Biden said, “They’re scheduled to resume.”

Iran said earlier last week that it had agreed with the European Union to restart talks to revive the 2015 deal that limited the Islamic Republic’s nuclear work in exchange

U.K. Prime Minister Boris Johnson (left), French President Emmanuel Macron, German Chancellor Angela Merkel and President Biden confer during the G-20 summit in Rome.

for relief from economic sanctions that had cut off oil exports and hobbled its economy. A precise date for negotiatio­ns to resume has not been announced.

The Biden administra­tion has said it wants to negotiate a return to and expansion of that agreement, which was ratified under the Obama administra­tion.

Former President Donald

Trump pulled out of the accord in 2018, as his administra­tion argued the pact emboldened Iranian activities that destabiliz­e the Middle East and didn’t adequately address Iran’s ballistic missile program. Following Trump’s withdrawal, Iran began violating the deal’s restrictio­ns and said it would no longer observe limits on the amount of nuclear material it produces.

Restarting the talks has thus far proved elusive — particular­ly after the June election of hard-liner Raisi. The White House has resisted undoing Trump-era sanctions that have frozen billions of dollars of payments for oil imports, a key demand from Tehran.

 ?? Getty Images ??
Getty Images

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States