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NUKE TALKS IMPASSE

EU says it may not be possible to cross the finish line on Iran nuclear deal

EU says it may not be possible to cross the finish line on Iran nuclear deal
European Union Ambassador Olof Skoog speaks during a special session of the General Assembly at the United Nations headquarters on 28 February 2022 in New York City. (Photo: Michael M Santiago / Getty Images)

Senior Western officials voiced doubts on Thursday about reviving the 2015 Iran nuclear deal, with the European Union saying it ‘might not make it over the finishing line’ and a US official saying the odds had lengthened after this week’s failed talks.

The UN Security Council met to discuss Iran one day after indirect US-Iran talks ended in Doha with no sign of progress on resurrecting the pact under which Tehran limited its nuclear programme in return for relief from US, UN and EU sanctions.

I am concerned that we might not make it over the finishing line. My message is: Seize this opportunity to conclude the deal, based on the text that is on the table, said European Union Ambassador to the United Nations Olof Skoog.

The EU coordinates the talks on resurrecting the agreement, which then US President Donald Trump reneged on in 2018 and restored harsh US sanctions on Iran, prompting Tehran to start violating its nuclear restrictions about a year later.

The prospects for a deal after Doha are worse than they were before Doha and they will be getting worse by the day, the senior US official told Reuters on condition of anonymity.

You could describe Doha at best as treading water, at worst as moving backwards. But at this point, treading water is, for all practical purposes, moving backwards, he added.

The Security Council met to discuss the latest report by UN Secretary-General António Guterres on the implementation of a 2015 council resolution that enshrines the nuclear deal, formally called the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action (JCPOA).

US, British and French diplomats all placed the onus on Iran for the failure to revive the agreement after more than a year of negotiations.

“[Iran] should urgently take this deal – there will not be a better one, said Britain’s UN Ambassador, Barbara Woodward.

Iran has yet to demonstrate any real urgency to conclude a deal, end the current nuclear crisis and achieve important sanctions lifting,” Richard Mills, Deputy US Ambassador to the United Nations, told the meeting.

Not only has Iran not taken up the offer on the table, but it also added yet more issues which fall outside the JCPOA with maximalist and unrealistic demands, said French UN Ambassador Nicolas de Riviere.

Iran, however, described the latest talks as serious and positive and said it was ready to strike an agreement.

Iran has demanded verifiable and objective guarantees from the US that the JCPOA will not be torpedoed again, that the US will not violate its obligations again, and that sanctions will not be re-imposed under other pretexts or designations, Iran’s UN Ambassador, Majid Takht Ravanchi, told the council.

The senior US official disputed Tehran’s argument that Washington was to blame for the lack of progress, saying the United States had responded positively to proposed EU changes to the draft text of an agreement reached in wider talks in March while Iran had failed to respond to those proposals.

Their vague demands, reopening of settled issues and requests clearly unrelated to the JCPOA all suggests to us … that the real discussion that has to take place is [not] between Iran and the US to resolve remaining differences. It is between Iran and Iran , said the senior US official.

At this point, I am not sure if they [the Iranians] know what more they want. They didn’t come to Doha with specifics, he added.

However, Chinese and Russian diplomats faulted the United States, with Beijing’s representative urging Washington to ease unilateral US sanctions on Iran and Russia’s calling for all sides to show flexibility.

(Reporting by Michelle Nichols at the United Nations and Arshad Mohammed in Washington. Editing by Mark Heinrich, Grant McCool and Daniel Wallis.)

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