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Iran Says It Has ‘Plan B’ That US May Not Want To See Put In Motion

Maryam Sinaiee
Maryam Sinaiee

Iran International

Jan 17, 2022, 10:00 GMT+0Updated: 17:35 GMT+1
Iran's foreign ministry spokesman, Saeed Khatibzadeh at a press briefing in December.
Iran's foreign ministry spokesman, Saeed Khatibzadeh at a press briefing in December.

Iran's foreign ministry urged the United States on Monday to put its utmost effort into making “plan A work to avoid Iran's Plan B” from going into effect.

"I advise the US Secretary of State [Anthony Blinken] to spare no effort to make [the US] Plan A work, because a Plan B is not attractive to anyone," foreign ministry spokesman Saeed Khatibzadeh told reporters at a weekly briefing with reporters Monday morning.

"He knows better than anyone that every country has its own Plan B, and ours may not appeal to them," he said when asked about Blinken's warning that the time left for salvaging the 2015 nuclear deal, Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action (JCPOA), is very short.

In an interview with NPR on Thursday, Blinken said the best thing for the US security and the security of its allies and partners in the region is getting back to the JCPOA “in the weeks ahead – not months ahead, weeks ahead.” Blinken warned that Iran is making nuclear advances that will become increasingly hard to reverse "because they’re learning things, they’re doing new things” without the constraints of the 2015 agreement to restrict its nuclear program.

Khatibzadeh’s warning about Iran’s Plan B sounded like a threat, as it is fast accumulating highly enriched uranium and approaching the point where it can have enough fissile material for a bomb.

Khatibzadeh stressed that Iran will not concede on matters important to it to reach a deal. "Had Iran surrendered its redlines, an agreement would result in the first six rounds [of the talks]. We will not forget our main [demands] and our redlines [just] to strike a deal."

The Iranian foreign ministry spokesman also said important disagreements remain, the most important of which is the other sides' slow momentum. On technical issues, considerable progress has been made, but on lifting sanctions we're waiting for political decisions yet to be made by the other side.

Over the weekend, experts continued discussing the four main drafts being worked on, Khatibzadeh said, insisting that many question marks have been lifted.

"Agreements have been made about ideas to a large extent and they are turning into words and sentences. But the issues that remain are key subjects that require certain political decisions, particularly by Washington. They have to announce their decisions about the remaining issues, especially the lifting of sanctions," he said. "Washington must make tough decisions on sanctions-removal and remaining issues. If this happens…we can move faster towards an agreement."

But the European Union envoy Enrique Mora, who is the coordinator of Vienna talks to revive Iran’s nuclear deal, said Sunday that the success of negotiations is still uncertain.

Mora made the remarks in a tweet on following a meeting of the working group on the removal of US sanctions on Tehran.

Referring to a letter by more than 100 US Republican lawmakers to President Joe Biden last week to immediately abandon the nuclear talks, which they called "fruitless" negotiations,” Khatibzadeh said US domestic policy has nothing to do with Iran, insisting that the Biden administration must adhere to the commitments the US made in 2015 nuclear deal.

The US lawmakers in their letter said further delay in withdrawal from the talks would only enable "Iran's malign activities, including their aggressive nuclear pursuit."

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EU Envoy Says Success Of Iran Nuclear Talks Is Still Uncertain

Jan 16, 2022, 16:50 GMT+0

European Union envoy Enrique Mora, who is the coordinator of Vienna talks to revive Iran’s nuclear deal, says the success of negotiations is still uncertain.

Mora made the remarks in a tweet on Sunday following a meeting of the working group on the removal of US sanctions on Tehran.

Saying that more meetings were scheduled for the day with experts from the participating sides, Mora emphasized that uncertainty about the result is “logical in such a complex negotiation”.

Mora also appreciated the commitment of the negotiating teams to reaching a final agreement.

Also on Sunday, Russia’s top negotiator Mikhail Ulyanov twitted about a meeting of the working group on implementation, which is set to coordinate the sequencing of steps on Iran’s nuclear activities and lifting of sanctions.

On Friday, French Foreign Minister Jean-Yves Le Drian said it is “vital” that Vienna talks “succeed” because if negotiations continue with the current speed there will be nothing left to negotiate about.

He sounded less optimistic than EU foreign policy chief Josep Borrell who said that a renewed deal with Iran is still "possible in the coming weeks” as the talks are advancing in a "better atmosphere".

Earlier on Friday, chief negotiators of Iran and the three European participants in the talks returned to their capitals to hold consultations and update their respective governments.

France Says Vienna Talks Will Be Futile With Current Pace

Jan 15, 2022, 16:19 GMT+0

France says it is “vital” that Vienna talks to revive the 2015 nuclear agreement “succeed” because if negotiations continue with the current speed there will be nothing left to negotiate.

French Foreign Minister Jean-Yves Le Drian made the remarks on Friday stressing that the pace of the talks is “way too slow” to be able to reach a result.

Le Drian said, “The choice is to return to the JCPOA agreement very quickly, or [to accept] a new [nuclear] proliferation crisis with Iran”.

He underlined that Iran is continuing its production of fissile materials and soon will be able to build a nuclear bomb, which makes any agreement useless.

Le Drian, however, added that if Iran wants to reach a deal, “we have the impression that there will be flexibility in the Americans' stance”.

He sounded less optimistic than EU foreign policy chief Josep Borrell who said that a renewed deal with Iran is still "possible" as the talks are advancing in a "better atmosphere".

"We're arriving at the end of a long process... there's a better atmosphere since Christmas — before Christmas I was very pessimistic. Today I believe reaching an accord is possible… in the coming weeks", Borrell said.

On Friday, chief negotiators of Iran and the three European participants in the Vienna nuclear talks returned to their capitals to hold consultations and update their respective governments.

Iran, E3 Negotiators In Vienna Return Home For Consultations

Jan 14, 2022, 17:52 GMT+0

Chief negotiators of Iran and the three European participants in the Vienna nuclear talks have returned to their capitals to hold consultations and update their respective governments.

European Union envoy Enrique Mora, who is the coordinator of the negotiations, told Iran International on Friday that he stays in Vienna where expert-level talks will continue over the weekend.

Russia’s top negotiator Mikhail Ulyanov said it is a two-day recess and doesn’t mean that the eighth round is over.

EU foreign policy chief Josep Borrell also said that a renewed deal with Iran is still "possible" as the talks are advancing in a "better atmosphere".

"We're arriving at the end of a long process... there's a better atmosphere since Christmas — before Christmas I was very pessimistic. Today I believe reaching an accord is possible," he said after an informal meeting of EU foreign ministers.

Borrell expressed hope to revive the agreement "in the coming weeks" so that it functions as it did before the American withdrawal.

Also on Friday, an unnamed source close to the talks told Reuters that “we are in the nitty gritty, it is the most tedious and demanding stage of negotiations as we’re increasingly dealing with the sequencing of nuclear and sanctions steps”, adding that the problem is not the issues but time “as we do not have all the time in the world”.

Pompeo Says Biden Admin 'Living In Fantasy World' Regarding Iran

Jan 14, 2022, 17:00 GMT+0

Former Secretary of State Mike Pompeo slammed the Biden Administration for continuing talks with Iran while Tehran is threatening former US officials and attacking US targets.

In an interview with Fox News Friday, Pompeo drew attention to an animation video published on the official website of Iran’s Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei showing a man targeting former President Donald Trump playing golf.

Pompeo said, “I have seen a little clip of a video where they are threatening to kill President Trump and myself, and yet we have negotiators sitting at the table in Vienna.”

The White House warned Iran on Sunday [Jan. 9] after numerous threats by Islamic Republic officials to take revenge from American and Israeli officials they hold responsible for the targeted killing of Iranian operative Qasem Soleimani in January 2020.

National Security Advisor Jake Sullivan said Iran will face severe consequences if it attacks any Americans, but negotiations to revive the Obama-era nuclear deal with Iran continue in Vienna.

Days after the warning, Iraqi militias fired rockets at Baghdad’s Green Zone and the US embassy late on Thursday.

On Soleimani’s killing Pompeo said, “We kept Americans safe. Today we have negotiators with the Iranians willing to give them money, resources, power tools to continue to build their terror network. It is an enormous mistake.”

If the talks in Vienna succeed, the United States will lift most economic sanctions imposed by Trump in 2018 when he withdrew from the nuclear agreement arguing that it was a weak deal, which would not stop Tehran form acquiring nuclear weapons in the future.

“I can't figure out why we're in Vienna negotiating with an Iranian regime attacking diplomats in Baghdad and threatening senior officials,” Pompeo, who has always expressed a hardline position toward the Islamic Republic, asked.

The Fox News reporter asked Pompeo what he thinks about the Biden Administration spokesperson Jen Psaki blaming the nuclear standoff with Iran on Trump’s decision to pull out of the JCPOA.

“She's living in a fantasy world disconnected from the real world that was the JCPOA,” the former secretary of state said, and added, “It created a clear path for a nuclear weapon and an entire program of nuclear weapons that the Iranians would have had possession.”

Pompeo continued with the argument that the Trump administration made the right decision to pull out of the agreement and given four more years, Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei would capitulate and sign a new agreement which would ban Iran “from enriching uranium and

threatening Israel and the United States.”

The Biden Administration argues that Trump’s sanctions did not have the desired effect and pushed Iran to increase its uranium enrichment and malign activities in the region.

In reality, both are right in a sense, but there are two issues. First, is the dimension of time. If US sanctions were kept in place and enforced, Iran’s current economic crisis could force it to negotiate even with a second Trump administration. But in less than three years from mid-2018 to January 2021, Tehran resisted and refused to negotiate with Washington.

Second, Iran’s dangerous expansion of uranium enrichment accelerated after President Joe Biden said he wanted to revive the nuclear agreement and lift sanctions. Also, the Biden administration has not enforced sanctions strictly and China sensing a weakness has doubled its illicit oil imports from Tehran, helping it to adopt a tough position in Vienna.

US Says Iran Nuclear Program Is Advancing In Dangerous Ways

Jan 14, 2022, 09:46 GMT+0

US Secretary of State Antony Blinken says Iran is advancing its nuclear program in increasingly dangerous ways, and its malign activities in the region have also increased.

In an interview with NPR on Thursday, Blinken reiterated that the US policy remains preventing the Islamic Republic from acquiring a nuclear bomb, noting that the 2015 agreement, JCPOA, had managed to “put Iran’s nuclear program in a box”.

Admitting that Iran is closer than ever to threshold capability to build atomic bombs, he said, “Iran is getting closer and closer to the point where they could produce on very, very short order enough fissile material for a nuclear weapon”.

He said that Washington is in this “challenging situation” due to “one of the worst decisions made in recent American foreign policy” that was walking away from the nuclear agreement, officially known as the JCPOA.

Blinken said “the best thing for our security and the security of our allies and partners in the region” is getting back to the JCPOA “in the weeks ahead – not months ahead, weeks ahead” since Iran is “making advances that will become increasingly hard to reverse because they’re learning things, they’re doing new things” without the constraints of the deal.

He repeated earlier statements that the US is lookingat other options if it can’t get back to mutual compliance in a few weeks.