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Iran, unlike West, upbeat about nuclear talks, say experts

Iran's chief nuclear negotiator Ali Bagheri Kani arrives at the Coburg Palais, venue of the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action (JCPOA) meeting aimed at reviving the Iran nuclear deal, in Vienna on December 17. - AFP file photo
 
Iran's chief nuclear negotiator Ali Bagheri Kani arrives at the Coburg Palais, venue of the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action (JCPOA) meeting aimed at reviving the Iran nuclear deal, in Vienna on December 17. - AFP file photo
TEHRAN: Iran believes it has scored points in the Vienna talks meant to revive its tattered 2015 nuclear deal by managing to include sanctions relief in discussion documents for the next round, experts say.

The lifting of the punishing sanctions regime then-US president Donald Trump imposed when he pulled Washington out of the agreement in 2018 has been Tehran's top priority.

European powers have voiced frustration at a lack of progress so far in the Vienna talks, which their diplomats warned on Friday are 'rapidly reaching the end of the road'.

But from Tehran's perspective, there has been progress, say Iranian officials and political analysts from the Islamic republic and abroad.

'The parties have agreed on two new texts, the result of intense discussions in recent days in Vienna,' Iranian foreign ministry spokesman Saeed Khatibzadeh said on Monday.

'These are documents in which Iran's position has been taken into account... and on the basis of which we can continue future discussions.'

Bernard Hourcade, a French expert on Iran, said Tehran had 'succeeded in this session in convincing their interlocutors that the sanctions must be settled as a priority, because this will pave the way for technical settlement of the nuclear component'.

He said Iran regularly stresses that it has 'always respected' the original 2015 deal, called the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action (JCPOA), and 'that it is up to the United States, which has flouted its honour, to repair the damage'.

Iran, Hourcade added, 'knows the balance of power is to its advantage because it is now at the threshold, that it is able in the short term, like about 30 other countries in the world, to manufacture an atomic bomb if it wishes. It can enrich uranium whenever it wants.'

ALTERNATIVES

The parties to the 2015 deal with Iran -- Britain, China, France, Germany, Russia and the United States -- saw it as the best way to stop it developing a nuclear weapons capability, a goal Tehran has always denied pursuing.

Iran pledged to reduce its nuclear activities, which are monitored by the International Atomic Energy Agency, in exchange for relief from sanctions then in force against it.

When Trump pulled out of the deal, he imposed an even more painful and sweeping sanctions regime, including a unilateral US ban on Iran's crucial oil sales, leading Iran to step up its nuclear activities again.

After US President Joe Biden replaced Trump, talks to revive the accord resumed. They stopped before Iran's June presidential election, then resumed on November 29.

Tehran's new ultraconservative government has said agreement could be reached 'quickly' if the West is serious about lifting sanctions and stops making 'threats'.

Iran refuses to engage directly with the US, so Washington is participating indirectly.

Iran's arch foe Israel is not a party to the talks but has threatened force if diplomacy fails, and the US has also said it is preparing 'alternatives.'

Biden's national security adviser, Jake Sullivan, has voiced frustration with the talks, saying days ago that 'it's not going well in the sense that we do not yet have a pathway back into the JCPOA'.

Sullivan was due to arrive in Israel later Tuesday for talks, which White House officials said would focus partly on Iran and the 'very serious situation' around the nuclear talks, which they described as 'fluid'. - AFP