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Exclusive - Russian Envoy Says Iran Nuclear Talks Are Now On 'Right Track'

Maryam Sinaiee
Maryam Sinaiee

Iran International

Dec 12, 2021, 19:01 GMT+0Updated: 17:27 GMT+1
Russian envoy at Iran nuclear talks, Mikhail Ulyanov.
Russian envoy at Iran nuclear talks, Mikhail Ulyanov.

Russia's envoy in Vienna told Iran International TV Sunday that after a rough start last week, Iran's nuclear talks are progressing more constructively.

Mikhail Ulyanov described the atmosphere of this week's talks as much more constructive compared to last week when he said time was wasted. "No demarches… Just normal business-like dialogue," Ulyanov said after a meeting of delegations in an apparent reference to the Iranian negotiators' approach last week.

"We are on the right track, we don't waste time, we maintain dialogue, we arrange meetings at expert level, at higher level, like this one," he said, adding that he was "fully satisfied".

He also noted that as far as he knows, US President Joe Biden is "fully committed to successful conclusion of these talks" and that Biden and Vladimir Putin both want the 2015 nuclear deal, the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action (JCPOA) to be restored. Ulyanov also said the European Union's External Service was "doing a great job" as a mediator between Tehran and Washington.

Ulyanov stressed that talks are based on the text prepared in June after the six rounds of talks before the Iranian elections. President Ebrahim Raisi’s hardliner government trying to disregard understandings reached in talks during the former Iranian administration insists that current negotiations are based on two texts it presented to the other negotiators last week.

The Group of Seven (G7) foreign ministers meeting in Liverpool Sunday warned Tehran that time is running out to revive the JCPOA. The final communique from the G7 meeting said Iran "must stop its nuclear escalation and seize the opportunity to conclude a deal, while this is still possible.”

Britain, the current rotating president of G7, said the nuclear talks in Vienna that resumed after a five-month hiatus were the Islamic Republic's "last chance to come to the negotiating table with a serious resolution".

"There is still time for Iran to come and agree this deal," British Foreign Secretary Liz Truss told a press conference Sunday while emphasizing that the Islamic Republic will not be allowed to build a nuclear bomb.

Truss was the first among the officials of the JCPOA signatories to give a clear ultimatum to Tehran last week and she repeated the warning on Sunday.

A senior US State Department official said Saturday there was an "intense" conversation among the G7 countries, which were united in their position on the nuclear talks, adding that “time is shrinking, so we're united in that.”

Speaking after meetings with her G7 counterparts in Liverpool, Germany's foreign minister Annalena Baerbock Saturday told reporters that time was running out to revive the nuclear deal with Iran and complained that it had shown in the last days that no progress had been made.

Iran's top negotiator, Ali Bagheri-Kani told the state-run Press TV Sunday that European countries had failed to offer any constructive initiative or proposal. "European parties fail to come up with any initiatives to resolve differences over the removal of sanctions," he said.

Bagheri-Kani also told Press TV that unresolved differences over sanctions have remained from the previous talks held before President Ebrahim Raisi's election. The differences, especially on the nuclear issue, are numerous and varied,” he said.

Bagheri-Kani also told Lebanon's pro-Iranian Al Mayadeen TV Sunday that Tehran's approach during the recent negotiations was successful and good progress was made which will pave the way for "serious negotiations".

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Britain Again Tells Iran 'This Is The Last Chance' To Resolve Nuclear Issue

Dec 12, 2021, 12:43 GMT+0

Britain once again told Iran on Sunday that this is the last chance for its negotiators to present serious proposals and save the 2015 nuclear deal, the JCPOA.

"This is the last chance for Iran to come to the negotiating table with a serious resolution to this issue, which has to be agreeing the terms of the JCPOA," British Foreign Secretary Liz Truss said.

"This is their last chance, and it is vital that they do so. We will not allow Iran to acquire a nuclear weapon."

Truss had sent the same message to Tehran on December 8, saying “This is really the last chance for Iran to sign up and I strongly urge them to do that because we are determined to work with our allies to prevent Iran securing nuclear weapons," she told the Chatham House think tank.

Negotiation to revive the JCPOA resumed Thursday amid pessimism over Iran’s readiness to embrace understandings reached in earlier talks this year. The new hardliner government in Tehran has adopted a tougher position since after a 5-month interruption the talks reconvened on November 29.

Germany's foreign minister warned Saturday that time was running out to revive the nuclear deal. She was speaking after meetings with her G7 counterparts.

Time Is Running Out For A Deal With Iran, Germany Says

Dec 11, 2021, 21:14 GMT+0

Germany's foreign minister warned Saturday that time was running out to revive the nuclear deal with Iran, speaking after meetings with her G7 counterparts.

Talks have resumed in Vienna to try to revive the 2015 nuclear pact (JCPOA), with both sides trying to gauge the prospects of success after the latest exchanges in the stop-start negotiations.

Iran has presented a tougher position, making new demands, including the removal of all post-2018 US sanctions at once before it would scale back its revamped nuclear program.

"Time is running out," German Foreign Minister Annalena Baerbock told reporters in Liverpool, England where G7 foreign ministers are meeting.

"It has shown in the last days that we do not have any progress."

Baerbock said Iran had resumed the talks with a position that set the negotiations back six months. The current round of talks in Vienna follow a pause of five months after the election of a hardline anti-Westerner as Iran's president, Ebrahim Raisi.

Earlier, US officials said Secretary of State Antony Blinken had held a "productive" meeting with counterparts from Britain, Germany and France on Friday, discussing the way forward for the Iran talks.

A senior State Department official said there was an "intense" conversation among the G7 countries, which were united in their position on the nuclear talks. "The statement will also be strong on the importance of getting Iran back to the table and that it is possible to conclude a deal but that the time is shrinking, so we're united in that," the official, briefing reporters on the condition of anonymity, said.

The official added that US Special Envoy for Iran Robert Malley was heading back to Vienna for talks.

Iranian officials have previously said they were sticking to their tough stance.

Under the original nuclear deal, abandoned in 2018 by then-President Donald Trump, Iran limited its nuclear program in return for relief from U.S., European Union and UN sanctions. The West fears the program would be used to develop weapons, something Tehran denies.

Raisi said on Saturday that Tehran was serious in its nuclear talks in Vienna, the official IRNA news agency reported, but Iranian media have insisted that Iran has not softened its position and remains on what it proposed after talks resumed on November 29. Western negotiators rejected the Iranian position with dismay after the first round of talks ended on December 3.

The indirect US-Iranian talks, in which diplomats from France, Britain, Germany, Russia and China shuttle between them because Tehran refuses direct contact with Washington, aim to get both sides to resume full compliance with the accord.

The G7 meeting which is expected to result in a joint call for Iran to moderate its nuclear program and grasp the opportunity of the Vienna talks.

Reporting by Reuters

Iran Warns Of 'Heavy Price' After Talk Of US-Israeli Military Drills

Dec 11, 2021, 15:46 GMT+0

An Iranian website has quoted a top military official as threatening retaliation with missiles if the United States and Israel attack Iran’s nuclear sites.

US and Israel this week said they are considering joint military drills to prepare for action against Iran if current nuclear negotiations fail and political leaders decide to act to prevent Tehran from acquiring nuclear weapons.

Nour News close to Iran’s Supreme National Security Council Saturday in a brief report quoted a military official as saying that Iranian commanders would take an attack as an opportunity to test their missiles “on real targets, to extract a heavy price from aggressors who would violate the territory of the Islamic Republic.”

The military official also mentioned the January 8, 2020 ballistic missile attack on the Ain al Asad base in Iran hosting US troops and the concussion more than one hundred US troops received. He said he does not believe these soldiers would be willing to attack Iran.

Israeli officials have been reiterating that if a new nuclear agreement does not block Iran from its path to acquire nuclear arms, Israel has to ensure its security in any way possible, without seeking approval by the United States.

Blinken Met With European Counterparts Friday To Discuss Iran Deal

Dec 11, 2021, 13:07 GMT+0

US Secretary of State Antony Blinken on Friday held a "productive" meeting with counterparts from Britain, Germany and France, including a discussion of the Iran nuclear deal.

Talks between Iran and world powers over reviving a 2015 nuclear deal resumed in Vienna on Thursday.

"Secretary Blinken had a productive meeting with his E3 counterparts from Germany, France, and the UK in Liverpool yesterday. They discussed the JCPOA (Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action) talks and our way forward,” a State Department spokesperson said on Saturday.

After months of negotiations earlier this year, Iran’s new hardline government presented new demands in talks last week that led to pessimism over the outcome of diplomatic efforts to revive the JCPOA. The United States and its European allies have warned Iran that there little time left to reach an agreement, given Iran rapid nuclear advances.

The meeting took place in the northern English city of Liverpool on the eve of a G7 foreign ministers' meeting which is expected to result in a joint call for Iran to moderate its nuclear program and grasp the opportunity of talks in Vienna.

Reporting by Reuters

Guards-Affiliated Iran Newspaper Sees Positive Signs In Nuclear Talks

Dec 11, 2021, 12:46 GMT+0
•
Maryam Sinaiee

Javan newspaper in Tehran proclaimed Saturday a "positive atmosphere" in Iran’s Vienna talks with world powers, shifting from its previous downbeat reporting.

Under the headline "Vienna Positive, Moving Forward" across its front page, the newspaper, which is affiliated to the Revolutionary Guards (IRGC), wrote that it appeared “the western sides of the Vienna talks have entered the negotiation room from a different door this time and have adopted an approach…different from the past.”

The change had come, the paper noted, with the second round of talks with the new team of negotiators appointed by President Ebrahim Raisi (Raeesi), who took office in August: "Until last week European officials and diplomats leveled accusations against Iran and expressed doubt about reaching an agreement in the talks.”

Javan also claimed Robert Malley, the White House Iran envoy, had “reduced the extent of his attacks." It quoted Malley's remark Fridaythat reviving the 2015 nuclear agreement, Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action (JCPOA), would be the in "mutual interests" of both the United States and Iran.

European and US officials gave pessimistic media briefings after the first week of the resumed talks when Iran presented new written proposals for restoring the deal. The US, which left the JCPOA in 2018 and imposed ‘maximum pressure’ sanctions on Iran, takes part indirectly in Vienna.

A ‘European source’ told Reuters Friday that negotiators were still working on texts discussed five months ago during talks held when President Hassan Rouhani was still in office. According to Reuters’ source, Iran this week agreed to continue talks from where they left off in June – a matter that would be put to the test in “the next couple of days.”

Tasnim news agency, also affiliated with the IRGC, said Friday that Iran’s negotiating stance had not changed in a week, and quoted ‘a source close to the Iranian negotiation team’ that talks were based on Iran's recent proposals.

President Ebrahim Raisi Saturday outlined Tehran's approach in remarks quoted by the official news agency IRNA: "Some people claimed the Islamic Republic would not negotiate, others alleged that we wouldn't be serious in the talks…But the Islamic Republic took part in the talks with dignity and by offering texts demonstrated that it is serious in negotiations… a good agreement is possible if the US is serious about the lifting of its sanctions.”

But Raisi warned that “the enemy's strategy is to always keep the shadow of the sanctions over the Iranian people's heads and to expand it.”

Israeli Defense Minister Benny Gantz said Friday that he had told senior US officials in Washington that Israel considered Iran not only a threat to Israel but "a global problem that requires a global solution." Israel recently allocated $1.5 billion for a military attack on Iran.