US Says Window for Talks with Iran is ‘Very, Very Short’

Part of the Vienna nuclear negotiations with Iran last December (Reuters)
Part of the Vienna nuclear negotiations with Iran last December (Reuters)
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US Says Window for Talks with Iran is ‘Very, Very Short’

Part of the Vienna nuclear negotiations with Iran last December (Reuters)
Part of the Vienna nuclear negotiations with Iran last December (Reuters)

The Biden administration is blaming the former Trump administration for triggering Iran’s decision to enrich more uranium to a higher degree of purity by pulling out from the Iran nuclear deal in 2017.

Ned Price, a US State Department spokesman, made the justification after a “barrage of criticism” launched by Senator Bob Menendez, a Democrat from New Jersey, and the Chairman of the Senate Foreign Affairs Committee.

Menendez had criticized the Biden administration’s approach in handling Iran and its policy at negotiations in Vienna.

In a press briefing at the US State Department, Price told Asharq Al-Awsat that concerns regarding Iran expanding its nuclear program could be traced back to the Trump administration’s decision to pull out from the 2015 deal.

“These are advancements that Iran has been in a position to make ever since the last administration decided to leave the Iran deal, a deal that was verifiably and permanently preventing Iran from ever obtaining a nuclear weapon,” said Price.

“When the Iran deal was fully implemented, the so-called breakout time to which you refer was one year, meaning that it would take Iran one year to accumulate the fissile material necessary for a nuclear weapon if it chose to do so,” he added.

Nevertheless, Senator Menendez had warned that the breakout time could take place in three to four weeks.

“Now, that is separate and apart from the weaponization process. We’re very concerned with both of these processes. But purely from an enrichment standpoint, that breakout time was a year,” stated Price.

“Now – my colleague alluded to this a couple days ago – that breakout time is significantly less. And that is precisely because of the decision to leave the JCPOA that was working to elongate that breakout time,” he explained.

Price moves on to note that the Biden administration finds itself facing an unfortunate set of circumstances, which means that the window to reach a nuclear deal with Iran is closing fast.

That window is very, very short precisely because once Iran reaches the point where its nuclear advances have obviated the nonproliferation benefits that the nuclear deal conveyed, that’s a point at which it will no longer make sense to pursue a mutual return to compliance with the agreement.

Price warned that if a joint return to compliance fails, the US national security interest and the national security interest of allies and partners around the world would mean that the US needs to “pursue another course.”

“The reason the breakout time is – can be measured in weeks instead of months is precisely because Iran did not feel encumbered by the deal that the previous administration chose to abandon,” noted the spokesman.

Moreover, an official source at the US State Department confirmed to Asharq Al-Awsat that Robert Malley, the US special envoy to Iran, will return to Vienna on Friday to discuss mutual return to compliance with the deal with the participating parties (P5+1) and Iran.

The source stated that the proposal that Malley and the negotiating team will carry to Vienna has not changed, which stipulates the complete return to compliance with the deal.

Iran must “take many steps to show serious commitment to reach the agreement and make negotiations succeed.”

Next Wednesday, the Senate Foreign Relations Committee is scheduled to hold a closed-door hearing, in the presence of Malley, who will brief the body on the negotiations in Vienna.

It is noteworthy that the US administration faces many criticisms in Congress due to its handling of the Iranian nuclear file, the negotiations in Vienna, and the resignations in the ranks of the US negotiating team.

Many observers believe that the resignations were a result of the divisions between Malley and his team members beginning to surface.

In a Senate speech earlier this week, Menendez openly criticized the Biden administration for its insistence to stick to nuclear negotiations in Vienna, despite Tehran’s grave proximity to owning a nuclear weapon.

He stressed that the breakout time is three to four weeks, according to experts.

The prominent senator called on the Biden administration and international partners to pressure Iran to confront its nuclear and missile program and its dangerous behavior in the Middle East, including attacks against US and US interests in the region.



US Deports Iranian Pro-democracy Activist to Central African Republic

A general view shows a part of the capital Bangui, Central African Republic, February 16, 2016. REUTERS/Siegfried Modola Purchase Licensing Rights
A general view shows a part of the capital Bangui, Central African Republic, February 16, 2016. REUTERS/Siegfried Modola Purchase Licensing Rights
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US Deports Iranian Pro-democracy Activist to Central African Republic

A general view shows a part of the capital Bangui, Central African Republic, February 16, 2016. REUTERS/Siegfried Modola Purchase Licensing Rights
A general view shows a part of the capital Bangui, Central African Republic, February 16, 2016. REUTERS/Siegfried Modola Purchase Licensing Rights

The United States has deported an Iranian pro-democracy activist to Central African Republic, her lawyer said on Friday, describing it as a "super dangerous" transfer to a country with which the activist has no connection.

The Iranian American Legal Defense Fund (IALDF) said on Thursday that three Iranian women who fled persecution were at risk of deportation, including one who had converted to Christianity.

In the end, only the activist was on the flight which took off from Louisiana on Thursday night, said her lawyer, Emily Trostle, while not ruling out that the others could potentially be deported later.

The plane landed in Bangui, the capital of Central African Republic, shortly before 10 p.m. local time (2100 GMT), after a stop in Ghana's capital Accra, according to the ICE Flight Monitor managed by ‌Human Rights First.

It ‌was not immediately clear where the deportees would be housed or how long ‌they ⁠would be able ⁠to stay in Central African Republic.

"They have absolutely no connection to this place. In all of my filings I submitted tons of information about how this was super dangerous," Trostle told Reuters.

"These individuals are being removed from the United States and abandoned in a country where they have no status, no connection and no support network. We fear they will ultimately be forced to return to the countries they originally fled," Trostle said. 

The US State Department and Central African Republic's presidency did not immediately respond to requests for comment about the deportations to Central African Republic.  

⁠The US Department of Homeland Security said last week that all deportees would receive ‌full due process.  

Ghana and Central African Republic have signed deals ‌with President Donald Trump's administration to take in third-country deportees who in many cases secured legal protections from US courts so that ‌they could not be repatriated.  

The United States has used the deals — including with Central African Republic's ‌neighbor Democratic Republic of Congo, which is facing an Ebola outbreak — to deport people it cannot legally send home. 

The Trump administration has said the deals are lawful. Rights groups and advocates have said that the details of the deals are opaque and many of the deportees are ultimately repatriated. 

RISK OF REPATRIATION 

The IALDF said the Iranians facing deportation had their asylum claims denied ‌because of a rule requiring that asylum seekers first apply in countries they transit through before reaching the US. A federal court in California vacated that rule ⁠in May. 

The group said ⁠deporting Iranians to Central African Republic was "a potentially fatal action," citing security issues in the country and the risk that they would be sent back to Iran. 

President Faustin-Archange Touadera signed peace deals last year with several rebel groups. Others were weakened as Russian mercenaries and troops from Rwanda were deployed to shore up Touadera's government as well as UN peacekeepers. 

Ali Rahnama, interim executive director at the IALDF, said the Russian presence in Central African Republic was concerning because Russia had close intelligence ties with Iran. The US and Israel launched strikes on Iran on February 28, starting a now three-month-old war. 

Trump said in April that he thought that the Iranian people should rise up against the government in Tehran if a ceasefire were declared, but understood that it was too dangerous for them to do so. 

It was unclear how many people would be deported to Central African Republic on the first flight. 

An official briefed on the matter told Reuters on Thursday it was expected to transport about 20 people, including Syrians and Afghans. The official said hundreds of migrants could ultimately be deported there under the deal. 


Ukrainian Strike Kills One, Wounds 3 in Southern Russia

In this handout photograph taken and released by the press service of the 65th Mechanized Brigade of Ukrainian Armed Forces on June 11, 2026, Ukrainian servicemen attend a military training at an undisclosed location in Zaporizhzhia region, amid the Russian invasion of Ukraine. (Andriy Andriyenko / 65th Mechanized Brigade of Ukrainian Armed Forces / AFP)
In this handout photograph taken and released by the press service of the 65th Mechanized Brigade of Ukrainian Armed Forces on June 11, 2026, Ukrainian servicemen attend a military training at an undisclosed location in Zaporizhzhia region, amid the Russian invasion of Ukraine. (Andriy Andriyenko / 65th Mechanized Brigade of Ukrainian Armed Forces / AFP)
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Ukrainian Strike Kills One, Wounds 3 in Southern Russia

In this handout photograph taken and released by the press service of the 65th Mechanized Brigade of Ukrainian Armed Forces on June 11, 2026, Ukrainian servicemen attend a military training at an undisclosed location in Zaporizhzhia region, amid the Russian invasion of Ukraine. (Andriy Andriyenko / 65th Mechanized Brigade of Ukrainian Armed Forces / AFP)
In this handout photograph taken and released by the press service of the 65th Mechanized Brigade of Ukrainian Armed Forces on June 11, 2026, Ukrainian servicemen attend a military training at an undisclosed location in Zaporizhzhia region, amid the Russian invasion of Ukraine. (Andriy Andriyenko / 65th Mechanized Brigade of Ukrainian Armed Forces / AFP)

A Ukrainian drone attack killed one person and wounded at least three others in southern Russia, a regional official said Saturday, with nearly 100 people fighting to extinguish a fire caused by the strike.

The attack damaged port installations in the Temryuk district on the Sea of Azov, near the Kerch Strait separating mainland Russia from the Crimean peninsula, which has been occupied by Moscow since 2014.

"As a result of falling drone debris, a fire broke out at a maritime terminal... one person was killed," Krasnodar Krai Governor Veniamin Kondratyev posted on Telegram.

He added that at least three people were wounded, according to first reports, and that 96 people had been drafted to fight the blaze.

The Russian army said it had shot down a total of 177 Ukrainian drones overnight.

Ukraine has stepped up its campaign of attacks within Russia in recent months, claiming fair retaliation for Moscow's own massive bombardments across the more than four-year-long conflict.

Kyiv insists that the Ukrainian army first and foremost targets military installations and energy infrastructure, in a bid to deprive the Kremlin's war chest of vital fossil fuel revenues.


US Military Helping Move 7 Million Barrels of Oil Per Day Out of the Gulf

Residents swim and play in the waters of the Strait of Hormuz while cargo ships and commercial vessels lie anchored in the distance off Bandar Abbas, Iran, Wednesday, June 10, 2026.(Razieh Poudat/ISNA via AP)
Residents swim and play in the waters of the Strait of Hormuz while cargo ships and commercial vessels lie anchored in the distance off Bandar Abbas, Iran, Wednesday, June 10, 2026.(Razieh Poudat/ISNA via AP)
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US Military Helping Move 7 Million Barrels of Oil Per Day Out of the Gulf

Residents swim and play in the waters of the Strait of Hormuz while cargo ships and commercial vessels lie anchored in the distance off Bandar Abbas, Iran, Wednesday, June 10, 2026.(Razieh Poudat/ISNA via AP)
Residents swim and play in the waters of the Strait of Hormuz while cargo ships and commercial vessels lie anchored in the distance off Bandar Abbas, Iran, Wednesday, June 10, 2026.(Razieh Poudat/ISNA via AP)

Roughly 7 million barrels a day of oil are getting out of the Gulf with US military help, Energy Secretary Chris Wright said on Friday at an event in Houston.

That is about half of the flow of oil that has been stuck in the Strait of Hormuz since the US-Israeli war ‌with Iran ‌began, Wright said.

"We have a military ‌effort ⁠that we've not ⁠talked a lot about, which started more recently to get cargoes out," Wright said.

No Iranian crude is getting out of the Strait, Wright said at a Bloomberg Energy event, adding that he expects to see the free ⁠flow of all products through the ‌Gulf if ‌a deal is reached. And if no deal is ‌reached, he said the US military will work ‌to restore the flow.

The flow of 7 million bpd is a bigger number than the oil industry was expecting, said Dan Pickering, chief ‌investment officer at Pickering Energy Partners.

Oil prices, currently in the $88 range, indicate ⁠that investors had ⁠assumed only about 3 million to 4 million barrels of oil were flowing through the Strait, Rebecca Babin, CIBC Private Wealth senior energy trader, said at the event.

Wright said that some sanctions on Iran could be partially lifted if a deal is made.

A US gasoline tax holiday over the summer was a possibility that could help reduce prices, Wright said.