WASHINGTON – The United States took a major step on Thursday to restore the Iranian nuclear deal abandoned by the Trump administration, offering to join European nations in the first substantial diplomacy with Tehran in more than four years, government officials from Biden said.
In a series of moves aimed at delivering on one of President Biden’s key election promises, the administration stepped back on the Trump administration’s efforts to restore United Nations sanctions against Iran. These efforts had separated Washington from its European allies.
At the same time, Foreign Minister Antony J. Blinken announced on Thursday morning in a call to European Foreign Ministers that the United States would work with them to restore the 2015 nuclear deal with Iran, which he described as “an important achievement of” multilateral diplomacy. “
Hours later, Enrique Mora, the European Union’s Deputy Secretary-General for Political Affairs, appealed to the original signatories of the nuclear deal to save it from a “critical moment”.
“Intensive discussions with all participants and the USA,” said Mora on Twitter. “I am ready to invite you to an informal meeting to discuss the way forward.”
However, it was unclear whether the Iranians would agree. The first barrier to business recovery can be a politically sensitive dance about who goes first. The Biden government has other goals, including expanding and deepening the deal to curb Iran’s growing missile capability and continued support for terrorist groups and the Syrian government of Bashar al-Assad.
Mr Biden has announced that he will only lift the sanctions imposed by President Donald J. Trump if Iran returns to the limits of nuclear production observed until 2019.
Under the original 2015 deal, Iran shipped 97 percent of its nuclear fuel out of the country and agreed on tough restrictions on new production, which would essentially ensure that it would take a year or more to produce enough material for a single weapon to produce. In return, the world powers lifted international sanctions that had stifled the Iranian economy. But when he took office, Mr Trump unilaterally restored American sanctions, arguing that the deal was flawed.
Iran said the United States was the first to violate the 2015 nuclear deal, and it would not be brought back into line until America reversed course and allowed it to sell oil and do banking all over the place World perform. A senior official in the Biden government said Thursday evening that closing this loophole would be a “painstaking” process.
The announcement will open a number of delicate diplomatic offers. A State Department official said the United States had no indication of whether Iran would accept the offer and warned that the prospect of a meeting was a first step in a long, difficult process to restore the nuclear deal.
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Apr. 18, 2021, 6:10 p.m. ET
The offer comes days ahead of the Sunday date when Iran announced it would prevent international inspectors from visiting undeclared nuclear facilities and conducting unannounced nuclear site inspections if the US does not lift sanctions re-imposed by the Trump administration.
Such inspections, mandated by the nuclear deal, are vital to the understanding of the international community of Iran’s progress toward weapons capability. The State Department official said Thursday’s meeting was not specifically designed to prevent Iran from taking this step, as the United States would not offer a concession to forestall an action Iran has absolutely no reason to take .
The official also did not offer details of what proposals the United States might bring to initial meetings with Iran and the Europeans.
Sparring about who moves first will only be the first of many hurdles. And with a presidential election in Iran just four months away, it was not clear whether the country’s top leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei and the country’s political and military leadership would fully support reintegration into the United States.
A second senior government official from Biden said the negotiations would take place if other world powers, including China and Russia, were part of them. This left the question unanswered as to whether regional powers excluded in the last agreement – Saudi Arabia, Israel and the United Arab Emirates – would play a role.
The State Department said Iran must return to full compliance with the deal before the United States lifted a series of US economic sanctions that Mr Trump has imposed on Tehran and paralyzed the Iranian economy, as the Biden administration has stressed.
Until then, the Biden government with good reason withdrew its demand last fall that the United Nations Security Council enforce international sanctions against Iran for violating the original 2015 agreement that restricted its nuclear program.
Almost every other nation had rejected the Trump administration’s insistence that the United States could invoke the so-called snap-back sanctions because it was no longer part of the deal.
In addition, the Biden government is lifting travel restrictions on Iranian officials wishing to travel to the US to attend UN meetings, said the official, who spoke on condition of anonymity before announcing the measures.
Iranian Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif said on Twitter that Tehran is waiting for American and European officials to “demand an end to Trump’s legacy of #EconomicTerrorism against Iran”.
“We will be following ACTION w / action,” tweeted Mr Zarif.
When asked whether the United States had preliminary diplomatic communication with Iran, the State Department official did not specifically respond, simply saying that the government had consulted extensively on the issue.
European officials who more than a year ago officially accused Tehran of violating the agreement by collecting and enriching nuclear fuel beyond the limits of the agreement had largely been left to cohesion. In the hope that the deal will be restored once Mr Trump resigns, officials in the UK, France and Germany have since delayed enforcing a dispute mechanism to punish Iran for repeated violations of the deal.