Iran's Raisi calls on U.S. to lift sanctions to revive nuclear deal
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[February 21, 2022]
By Parisa Hafezi
VIENNA (Reuters) - Iranian President
Ebrahim Raisi said on Monday that talks in Vienna on reviving Tehran's
2015 nuclear deal with world powers cannot succeed unless the United
States is prepared to lift sanctions on the Islamic Republic.
Reuters reported last week that a U.S.-Iranian deal is taking shape in
Vienna after months of indirect talks to revive a pact Washington
abandoned in 2018 under then-President Donald Trump.
"The United States must prove its will to lift major sanctions," Raisi
said in a joint news conference with Qatari Emir Sheikh Tamim bin Hamad
al-Thani in Doha.
"To reach an agreement, guarantees are necessary for negotiations and
nuclear issues."
The draft text of the agreement also alluded to other issues, including
unfreezing billions of dollars in Iranian funds in South Korean banks,
and the release of Western prisoners held in Iran.
"Aggression is bound to fail. Resistance has brought results and none of
the regional issues have a military solution," Raisi said.
Raisi was more cautious than Iranian foreign ministry spokesman Saeed
Khatibzadeh, who said earlier that the Vienna negotiations had made
"significant progress".
Khatibzadeh also said that "nothing is agreed until everything is
agreed" in the Vienna talks. "The remaining issues are the hardest," he
told a weekly press briefing.
Khatibzadeh said that Iran’s top security body, the Supreme National
Security Council, handles the Vienna talks. It reports directly to
Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei.
The 2015 deal between Iran and world powers limited Tehran's enrichment
of uranium to make it harder for it to develop material for nuclear
weapons, in return for a lifting of international sanctions against
Tehran.
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The Iranian flag flies in front of the International Atomic Energy
Agency (IAEA) headquarters in Vienna, Austria May 23, 2021.
REUTERS/Leonhard Foeger/File Photo
Iran is ready to swap prisoners with the United States, Iran's foreign
minister said on Saturday, adding that talks to revive the nuclear deal
could succeed "at the earliest possible time" if the United States made
the necessary political decisions.
Speaking from Doha on the sidelines of a gas conference, Iranian Oil
Minister Javad Owji called the sanctions a violation of international
law and a threat to global energy security, the semi-official Tasnim
news agency reported.
Iran has violated some of the deal's nuclear limits since the United
States withdrew from it and reimposed sanctions under Trump.
Israel, Iran's arch-foe and widely believed to have its own nuclear
arsenal, has been closely watching the Vienna talks. It is pressing
Washington about the terms of an emerging Iranian nuclear deal, Israeli
officials said on Monday, raising the prospect of a bilateral day-after
agreement with Washington to address their worries.
While not a party to the talks, Israel has conferred with the U.S.
administration in hope of wielding more clout over any revival of the
deal with Tehran reached over its objections.
(Reporting by Parisa Hafezi and Dubai Newsroom; additional reporting by
Dan Williams in Jerusalem; Writing by Michael Georgy; Editing by Gareth
Jones, William Maclean, Nick Macfie and Angus MacSwan)
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