United States and European efforts to coax Iran back into nuclear negotiations as soon as this month are being blunted by support Tehran’s already emboldened leaders are receiving from China and Russia, according to Bloomberg.
The result is that three years after former President Donald Trump imposed his “maximum pressure” policy, Iran has enriched uranium close to weapons-grade while its economy is showing some signs of stabilizing with the help of Beijing and Moscow, even as crucial oil exports remain heavily sanctioned.
Diplomats and analysts suggest the developments are creating space for Iran’s new government to expand the list of concessions it wants from Washington to return to compliance with the 2015 agreement struck with world powers.
Doing so could push the talks into next year, topple the process entirely, or lead to fresh turmoil in the Middle East.
Iran’s negotiators see US sanctions yielding “diminishing returns,” and they’re likely to demand relief that goes beyond the nuclear penalties imposed by Trump, said Ali Vaez at the International Crisis Group, the Brussels-based research institute formerly led by top US Iran envoy Rob Malley.
In order to complicate any return to the deal, which had curbed Iran’s nuclear program in return for sanctions relief, the Trump administration loaded on a raft of sanctions billed as responding to human rights abuses and the funding of designated terrorist groups.
While no formal date has been set for a seventh-round of negotiations aimed at reviving the deal, talks are expected on the sidelines of the International Atomic Energy Agency’s general conference convening the week of Sept 21 in Vienna, according to two officials who asked not to be identified in line with diplomatic rules.
Washington says that while it’s “ready to compromise” on some issues, its negotiators won’t wait forever, and Iran’s nuclear program needs to be rolled back within limits.
IAEA director-general Rafael Mariano Grossi, meanwhile, is seeking a meeting with Iran’s new nuclear chief, Mohammad Eslami, prior to the Vienna conference. He wants to gauge Teheran’s willingness to restore expanded access for the agency’s monitors - terminated to protest US sanctions - and cooperate with international investigators, the two officials said.
Both Chinese President Xi Jinping and Russian leader Vladimir Putin spoke with Iran’s newly elected hardline President Ebrahim Raisi last month about the nuclear accord.
China and Russia are both signatories to the deal and have stated their desire for both sides to return to its terms.
But Xi has said his country supports Iran’s legitimate concerns over the agreement and pledged the continued financial support of the world’s second-biggest economy.