Analysis-U.S. leaves door open for Iran nuclear diplomacy
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[December 19, 2022]
By Arshad Mohammed and John Irish
WASHINGTON/PARIS (Reuters) - For nearly two years the United States has
tried and failed to negotiate a revival of the 2015 Iran nuclear deal
yet Washington and its European allies refuse to close the door to
diplomacy.
Their reasons reflect the danger of alternative approaches, the
unpredictable consequences of a military strike on Iran, and the belief
that there is still time to alter Tehran's course: even if it is inching
toward making fissile material it is not there yet, nor has it mastered
the technology to build a bomb, according to officials.
"I think that we do not have a better option than the JCPOA to ensure
that Iran does not develop nuclear weapons," Josep Borrell, the European
Union's foreign policy chief, said last week in Brussels after a meeting
of EU officials. Under the 2015 Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action under
which Tehran reined in its nuclear program in return for relief from
economic sanctions.
"We have to continue engaging as much as possible in trying to revive
this deal."
The uphill climb to revive the pact has grown steeper this year. Iran
has brutally cracked down on popular protests, Iranian drones have
allegedly made their way to aid Russia's war in Ukraine and Tehran has
accelerated its nuclear program, all of which raise the political price
to giving Iran sanctions relief.
"Every day you see more and more pundits saying this is the worst time
for reviving the deal and we should just be putting pressure on the
wretched regime there," said Robert Einhorn, a nonproliferation expert
at the Brookings Institution think tank.
"There is a kind of resignation, even among the strong proponents of
revival. Their hearts would be for paying the political price for a
revival, but their heads tell them it would be really tough," he added.
90% ENRICHMENT A RED LINE?
In 2018 former U.S. President Donald Trump reneged on the 2015 deal
that, in a key provision, limited Tehran's enrichment of uranium to a
purity of 3.67%, far below the 90% considered bomb grade.
Trump reimposed U.S. sanctions on Iran, leading Tehran to resume
previously banned nuclear work and reviving U.S., European and Israeli
fears that Iran may seek an atomic bomb. Iran denies any such ambition.
Iran is now enriching uranium to 60%, including at Fordow, a site buried
under a mountain, making it harder to destroy through bombardment.
Obtaining fissile material is considered the greatest obstacle to making
a nuclear weapon but there are others, notably the technical challenge
of designing a bomb.
A U.S. intelligence estimate disclosed in late 2007 assessed with high
confidence that Iran was working to develop nuclear weapons until the
fall of 2003, when it halted the weapons work.
Diplomats said they believed Iran had not begun enriching to 90%, which
they said they viewed as a red line.
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The flag of the International Atomic
Energy Agency (IAEA) flies in front of its headquarters in Vienna,
Austria, May 28, 2015. REUTERS/Heinz-Peter Bader
"If Iran were to clearly restart its military program and enrich at
90% then the entire debate changes in the United States, Europe and
Israel," said a Western diplomat, saying the diplomatic path would
remain open unless that happened.U.S. politicians have grown more
hostile to cutting a deal because of Iran's ruthless crackdown on
protests that began after a 22-year-old Kurdish Iranian woman, Mahsa
Amini, died in September in the custody of Iran's morality police.
U.S. President Joe Biden's administration has intensified sanctions
against Iran in recent months, targeting Chinese entities
facilitating sales of Iranian crude and penalizing Iranian officials
for human rights abuses.
Still, even though negotiations are stalled Enrique Mora, the
European diplomat who coordinates the nuclear talks, "keeps talking
to all sides," said a senior Biden administration official who spoke
on condition of anonymity.
"We will continue with the pressure while keeping the door open for
a return to diplomacy," U.S. special envoy for Iran Robert Malley
told reporters in Paris last month, adding that if Iran crossed "a
new threshold in its nuclear program, obviously the response will be
different." He did not elaborate.
Iran has linked a revival of the deal to the closure of
investigations by the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) into
uranium traces at three sites. The United States and its allies have
not agreed to that condition.
DIPLOMACY MAY LIVE EVEN IF JCPOA DIES
Several Western diplomats said they did not believe there was any
imminent consideration of military action against Iran and suggested
a strike could simply reinforce any Iranian desire to obtain nuclear
weapons and risk Iranian retaliation.
"I do not think ... anybody is envisaging a military option in the
near-term," said the Western diplomat. "The solution isn't going to
be military and I don't hear a lot of people calling for one."
A third diplomat said he thought it practically impossible for
Israel to bomb Iran without Western support.
Even if the 2015 nuclear deal cannot be resurrected, the senior
Biden administration official said other diplomatic solutions might
be possible.
"Whether, when and how the JCPOA can be revived is a difficult
question," he said. "But even if, at some point, the JCPOA were to
die, that would not mean that diplomacy would be buried at the same
time."
(Reporting by Arshad Mohammed in Washington and John Irish in Paris;
Editing by Don Durfee and Daniel Wallis)
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