Iran may accept EU proposal to revive nuclear deal if demands met -IRNA
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[August 12, 2022]
DUBAI (Reuters) -A European
Union proposal to revive the 2015 Iran nuclear deal “can be acceptable
if it provides assurances" on Tehran's key demands, the state news
agency IRNA said on Friday, quoting a senior Iranian diplomat.
The EU said on Monday it had put forward a "final" text following four
days of indirect talks between U.S. and Iranian officials in Vienna.
A senior EU official said no more changes could be made to the text,
which has been under negotiation for 15 months. He said he expected a
final decision from the parties within a "very, very few weeks.”
IRNA quoted the unidentified Iranian diplomat as saying Tehran was
reviewing the proposal. “Proposals by the EU can be acceptable if they
provide Iran with assurance on the issues of safeguards, sanctions and
guarantees,” the diplomat said.
The Islamic Republic has sought to obtain guarantees that no future U.S.
president would renege on the deal if it were revived, as then-President
Donald Trump did in 2018 and restored harsh U.S. sanctions on Iran.
However, President Joe Biden cannot provide such ironclad assurances
because the deal is a political understanding rather than a legally
binding treaty.
A Shi'ite Muslim cleric, in a sermon at Friday prayers that typically
echo the state line, said Tehran insisted on obtaining verifiable
guarantees that U.S. sanctions would be lifted under a revived deal,
according to Iranian state TV.
"We insist on getting the necessary guarantees, the lifting of sanctions
and verification, and if this is achieved, then our negotiating team
will tell the people that sanctions have been lifted thanks to your
resistance and power," Kazem Seddiqi said at Friday prayers in the
capital Tehran, according to state TV.
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Iranian flag flies in front of the UN
office building, housing IAEA headquarters, amid the coronavirus
disease (COVID-19) pandemic, in Vienna, Austria, May 24, 2021.
REUTERS/Lisi Niesner
Washington has said it is ready to quickly reach an agreement to
restore the deal on the basis of the EU proposals.
Iranian officials said they would convey their "additional views and
considerations" to the EU, which coordinates the talks, after
consultations in Tehran.
The 2015 pact seemed near revival in March. But 11 months of
indirect talks between Tehran and the Biden administration in Vienna
were thrown into disarray chiefly over Iran's insistence that
Washington remove its elite Revolutionary Guards Corps from the U.S.
Foreign Terrorist Organizations list.
On Wednesday the United States charged a Revolutionary Guards member
with plotting to murder John Bolton, a national security adviser to
Trump, though Washington said it did not believe the charges should
affect the nuclear talks with Tehran.
Under the 2015 agreement, Iran curbed its disputed uranium
enrichment programme, a possible pathway to nuclear weapons, in
return for relief from U.S., EU and U.N. sanctions. Tehran says it
wants nuclear power only for peaceful purposes.
(Editing by Mark Heinrich)
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