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Reuters
Reuters
Politics
By Parisa Hafezi

Iran seeks stronger U.S. guarantees for revival of 2015 nuclear deal

FILE PHOTO: Iran's and U.S.' flags are seen printed on paper in this illustration taken January 27, 2022. REUTERS/Dado Ruvic/Illustration/File Photo

Iran needs stronger guarantees from Washington for the revival of a 2015 nuclear deal, its foreign minister said in Moscow on Wednesday, adding that the U.N. atomic watchdog should drop its "politically motivated probes" of Tehran's nuclear work.

After 16 months of indirect talks between Tehran and Washington, EU foreign policy chief Josep Borrell said on Aug. 8 the EU had laid down a final offer to overcome an impasse for the revival of the agreement.

Iran's top diplomat, Hossein Amirabdollahian, said Tehran was carefully reviewing Washington's response to the text, which was conveyed to Iran last week by the EU as coordinator of the nuclear talks.

"Iran is carefully reviewing the EU-drafted text ... We need stronger guarantees from the other party to have a sustainable deal," Amirabdollahian told a joint news conference with his Russian counterpart in Moscow.

Amirabdollahian did not elaborate on "stronger guarantees," but during months of talks with Washington in Vienna, Tehran demanded U.S. assurances that no future American president would abandon the deal as former U.S. President Donald Trump did in 2018.

President Joe Biden cannot provide such ironclad assurances because the deal is a political understanding rather than a legally binding treaty.

White House national security spokesman John Kirby said he had not seen the Iranian foreign minister's comments.

"So I don't know what guarantees he's talking about," Kirby told reporters. The United States is awaiting a response from the EU and the Iranians.

"While we are, as I said earlier, cautiously optimistic, we are also pragmatic and clear-eyed and we realize that there's still gaps, and we’re trying to close those gaps in a good-faith way, negotiating through appropriate channels and not through the public," Kirby added.

Biden told Israeli Prime Minister Yair Lapid in a phone call on Wednesday the United States will never allow Iran to acquire a nuclear weapon, the White House said in a statement.

In its own readout of the call, Lapid's office said they "spoke at length about the negotiations on a nuclear agreement, and their shared commitment to stopping Iran’s progress towards a nuclear weapon."

Israel opposes a return to the 2015 deal. Biden has vowed to revive the agreement while ensuring the security of Israel, Iran's regional arch foe.

The man who ultimately matters in Iran's nuclear dispute with the West, Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, has not commented on the nuclear talks in his public speeches for months.

It was the bite of U.S., EU and U.N. sanctions over Tehran's nuclear program that forced Khamenei to give tentative backing to the 2015 pact between Tehran and major powers that curbed the country's nuclear program in exchange for lifting sanctions.

But three years later, Trump exited the pact and reimposed harsh sanctions on Iran, prompting Tehran to violate the pact's nuclear limits, such as rebuilding stockpiles of enriched uranium, refining it to higher fissile purity and installing advanced centrifuges to speed up output.

"It will be a massive embarrassment for the supreme leader if Washington pulls out of the deal again," said a former Iranian official. "That is one of the reasons behind Tehran's insistence on this issue."

The nuclear deal appeared near revival in March. But indirect talks between Tehran and Washington then broke down over several issues, including Tehran's insistence that the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) close its probes into uranium traces found at three undeclared sites before the nuclear pact is revived.

"The agency should close this case ... Such politically motivated demands are unacceptable for Iran," said Amirabdollahian.

Tehran's demand risks hurting efforts to save the pact. An Iranian official, speaking on condition of anonymity, told Reuters that closure of the IAEA's investigation is "the supreme leader's red line".

Kirby said U.S. officials believe the sides are closer now than they have been in months, "due in large part to Iran being willing to drop some of their demands that were not related to the deal at all."

(Reporting by Parisa Hafezi in DubaiAdditional reporting by Doina Chiacu, Rami Ayyub and Jeff Mason in WashingtonEditing by Nick Macfie and Matthew Lewis)

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