The Sentinel-Record

What are Iran nuclear talks all about?

- DAVID RISING The Associated Press Associated Press writers Jon Gambrell in Dubai, United Arab Emirates, and Matthew Lee in Brussels contribute­d to this story.

BERLIN — Negotiatio­ns to bring the United States back into a landmark nuclear deal with Iran resumed Thursday in Vienna amid signs of progress — but also under the shadow of an attack this week on Iran’s main nuclear facility. After more than two hours of talks characteri­zed by Russia’s delegate as generally positive, issues were turned back over to two working groups for continued discussion and refinement.

WHAT IS THE DEAL ABOUT?

In 2015, Iran signed an agreement with the U.S., Russia, China, Germany, France and Britain that was intended to set limits on Tehran’s nuclear program in order to block it from building a nuclear weapon — something it insists it doesn’t want to do.

In exchange, Iran received relief from sanctions that those powers had imposed, including on its exports of oil and access to the global banking system. Iran was allowed to continue to pursue its nuclear program for civilian purposes, with strict limits on how much uranium it could enrich, the purity it could enrich it to and other measures.

Before the deal, conservati­ve estimates were that Iran was within five to six months of being able to produce a bomb, while some feared it was within two to three months. With the deal safeguards in place, that “breakout time” was estimated to be more than a year.

But in 2018, then-President Donald Trump pulled the U.S. unilateral­ly out of the deal, criticizin­g clauses that ease restrictio­ns on Iran in stages — and also the fact that eventually the deal would expire and Iran would be allowed to do whatever it wanted with its nuclear technology. He also said it needed to be renegotiat­ed to address Iran’s ballistic missile program and regional influence such as backing militant groups.

The crippling American sanctions that followed took their toll on Iran’s economy — but failed to bring Tehran back to the table to broaden the deal as Trump wanted. Instead, Tehran steadily exceeded the limitation­s set by the deal to pressure the remaining members for economic relief.

In February, U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken said of Iran’s estimated breakout time that “we’re down to three or four months and heading in the wrong direction.”

SO WHAT’S BEING DISCUSSED NOW?

U.S. President Joe Biden has said that he wants to rejoin the deal, but that Iran must reverse its violations.

The European Union called the talks in the hopes of doing just that. Though an American delegation is present in Vienna, they are not meeting directly with Iran. Instead, diplomats from the other countries shuttle back and forth between the two sides.

Heading into the talks as they started last week, Iran said it was willing to return to full compliance with the deal, but that the U.S. would first have to drop all of the sanctions imposed under Trump.

That is complicate­d, however. The Trump administra­tion also added sanctions on Iran outside those related to its nuclear program, including over allegation­s of terrorism, human rights violations and for the country’s ballistic missile program.

Still, there are signs of hope. The talks quickly moved past that “who goes first” debate and have already started addressing specifics, said Aniseh Bassiri Tabrizi, an Iran scholar at Britain’s Royal United Services Institute.

“It’s a very good developmen­t that there are these working groups actually talking and looking at the nitty gritty,” she told The Associated Press.

For Iran to return to the deal, it must revert to enriching uranium to no more than 3.67% purity, stop using advanced centrifuge­s and drasticall­y reduce how much uranium it enriches, among other things.

Despite the challenges, Tabrizi said the task ahead is not as complicate­d as the one that faced the group in 2015 since they already have a deal to refer to.

Following the meeting of the Joint Commission on Thursday, Russia’s ambassador to the IAEA, Mikhail Ulyanov, tweeted that the two expert groups looking at American sanctions and Iranian compliance would continue working.

“It will be followed by a number of informal meetings in different formats, including at expert level,” he wrote. “General impression is positive.”

HOW LONG WILL THE TALKS TAKE?

There is no specified timeframe. Diplomats involved say the issues cannot be solved overnight, but are hoping for a resolution in weeks rather than months — for several reasons.

The original deal, known as the Joint Comprehens­ive Plan of Action, or JCPOA, was agreed after Iranian President Hassan Rouhani, widely seen as a moderate, first took office. Rouhani can’t run again in upcoming June elections due to term limits, and he hopes to be able to leave office with Iran again able to sell oil abroad and access internatio­nal financial markets.

Meanwhile, the U.S. could face a much tougher negotiatio­n if it doesn’t get a deal before Rouhani leaves. Hard-liners in Iran reject the nuclear deal, saying it hasn’t delivered enough economic relief and is a slippery slope to more pressure on Iran. That doesn’t necessaril­y mean they would end talks if elected, though it would complicate things, said Sanam Vakil, deputy director of the Chatham House policy institute’s Middle East and North Africa program.

There is another reason to move quickly: Iran in February began restrictin­g Internatio­nal Atomic Energy Agency inspection­s of its nuclear facilities. Instead, it said that it would preserve surveillan­ce footage of the facilities for three months and hand them over to the IAEA if it is granted sanctions relief. Otherwise, Iran said it would erase the recordings.

WHAT OBSTACLES COULD GET IN WAY?

Lots, as recent events have shown. Over the weekend, Iran’s Natanz nuclear facility was sabotaged. It’s not clear what exactly happened, but a blackout damaged centrifuge­s there.

The attack was widely suspected of being carried out by Israel, which opposes the nuclear deal, though authoritie­s there have not commented.

Iran says Israel explicitly hopes to derail the talks with the sabotage. Rouhani said he still hoped the talks would yield a result — but the attack has complicate­d matters. For one, Iran responded by announcing it would increase uranium enrichment to 60% purity — far higher than ever before — and install more advanced centrifuge­s at the Natanz facility.

And in the wake of the developmen­ts, both sides have ramped up the rhetoric.

On Wednesday, Iran’s Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, who has final say on all matters of state in the Islamic Republic, dismissed all offers seen so far in Vienna as “not worth looking at.” Still, he said he had confidence in his negotiator­s.

Blinken, meanwhile, said Washington had shown its seriousnes­s by participat­ing in the indirect talks in Vienna, but with Tehran’s recent announceme­nts, “it remains to be seen whether Iran shares that seriousnes­s of purpose.”

 ?? The Associated Press ?? Demonstrat­ors of an Iranian opposition group protest near the Grand Hotel Wien where closeddoor nuclear talks with Iran take place Thursday in Vienna, Austria.
The Associated Press Demonstrat­ors of an Iranian opposition group protest near the Grand Hotel Wien where closeddoor nuclear talks with Iran take place Thursday in Vienna, Austria.

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