European Sources to Asharq Al-Awsat: We Made Concessions to Iran, it Should Seize the Opportunity

French Foreign Minister Catherine Colonna at the G20 meeting in Bali, Indonesia, last week (AFP)
French Foreign Minister Catherine Colonna at the G20 meeting in Bali, Indonesia, last week (AFP)
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European Sources to Asharq Al-Awsat: We Made Concessions to Iran, it Should Seize the Opportunity

French Foreign Minister Catherine Colonna at the G20 meeting in Bali, Indonesia, last week (AFP)
French Foreign Minister Catherine Colonna at the G20 meeting in Bali, Indonesia, last week (AFP)

With the end of the latest round of indirect talks between Iran and the United States, through European mediation, the four western capitals (Washington, London, Paris and Berlin), in addition to the representative of the European Union, were convinced that discussions in Vienna would pave the way for a speedy return to the nuclear agreement concluded in the summer of 2015.

An agreement was reached on correlating the gradual lifting of the sanctions that the previous US administration re-imposed in the spring of 2018, with the Iranian side retracting the serious violations of the content of the agreement.

Westerners, led by Washington, were convinced that during the long negotiating sessions, they showed a lot of flexibility to convince Tehran that the agreed text was in its interest and provided it with many advantages. Therefore, they stressed that it had to seize the opportunity presented to it.

European diplomatic sources in Paris believe that the Westerners have given Tehran a “valuable gift” that would push the Iranian leadership to abandon its reservations and the additional demands it raises.

The sources told Asharq Al-Awsat that West accepted, in accordance with Tehran’s desire, to abandon the demand to link the nuclear negotiations with two other files, namely Iran’s missile-ballistic capabilities and its destabilizing regional policy.

In fact, these two issues represented a major part of US President Joe Biden’s approach to the Iranian nuclear program.

In the same context, French President Emmanuel Macron was the first to urge former US President Donald Trump to refrain from abandoning the 2015 agreement, supplementing it with three annexes dealing with the timing of the agreement and the two issues of concern in the Middle East, namely the expansion of Iran’s missile and ballistic programs and its policy of interference in the affairs of others.

US President Joe Biden’s visit to Saudi Arabia and the summit with Gulf and Arab leaders will provide an opportunity to discuss these two files and present the final US vision.

Three pending files are delaying or preventing the signing of the Vienna draft agreement on Saturday. Those include guarantees demanded by Tehran on never abandoning the agreement, the Iranian Revolutionary Guards, which is on the list of US terrorist organizations, and the sanctions file.

European diplomatic sources believe that there were solutions that were proposed and that Iran could accept. However, Tehran rejected them and adhered to “tough” positions, including the indirect talks that took place in Doha through the mediation of the European Union’s foreign policy chief, Josep Borrell and his assistant, Enrique Mora.

According to the same sources, Iran’s hardline stances “damage and weaken the American president politically” and make him “incapable of presenting additional concessions that do not serve Iranian interests.”

The sources believe that the offer presented to Tehran was “final”, noting that Iran must seize the opportunity, by either accepting or rejecting it. The two options have each political, diplomatic, security and military consequences.



German Warships Await Orders on Crossing Taiwan Strait

Sailors line the deck of the German frigate F222 Baden-Wuerttemberg in New York City, US, May 22, 2024. REUTERS/Brendan McDermid/File Photo
Sailors line the deck of the German frigate F222 Baden-Wuerttemberg in New York City, US, May 22, 2024. REUTERS/Brendan McDermid/File Photo
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German Warships Await Orders on Crossing Taiwan Strait

Sailors line the deck of the German frigate F222 Baden-Wuerttemberg in New York City, US, May 22, 2024. REUTERS/Brendan McDermid/File Photo
Sailors line the deck of the German frigate F222 Baden-Wuerttemberg in New York City, US, May 22, 2024. REUTERS/Brendan McDermid/File Photo

Two German warships await orders from Berlin, their commander said, to determine whether next month they will be the first German naval vessels in decades to pass through the Taiwan Strait, drawing a rebuke from Beijing.
While the U.S. and other nations, including Canada, have sent warships through the narrow strait in recent weeks, it would be the German navy's first passage through the strait since 2002.
China claims sovereignty over democratically governed Taiwan, and says it has jurisdiction over the nearly 180-km (110 miles) wide waterway that divides the two sides and is part of the South China Sea. Taiwan strongly objects to China’s sovereignty claims and says only the island’s people can decide their future.
The Taiwan Strait is a major trade route through which about half of global container ships pass, and both the United States and Taiwan say it's an international waterway.
"The decision has not been taken yet," the commander of the naval task group, Rear Admiral Axel Schulz, told Reuters in a telephone interview, adding the weather would play a role.
"We are showing our flag here to demonstrate that we stand by our partners and friends, our commitment to the rules-based order, the peaceful solution of territorial conflicts and free and secure shipping lanes."
Asked about the German ships' potential passage, China's foreign ministry said Taiwan was an internal Chinese affair and the key to stability was opposing Taiwan's independence.
"China has always been opposed to the undermining of China's territorial sovereignty and security under the guise of freedom of navigation," ministry spokesperson Mao Ning told reporters in Beijing.
Before their possible passage through the strait next month, the frigate Baden-Wuerttemberg and the replenishment ship Frankfurt am Main plan to call in Tokyo on Tuesday. They will also make stops in South Korea and the Philippines.
They will take part in exercises in the region with France, Indonesia, Italy, Japan, Malaysia, Singapore, the Philippines, and the United States.
Over the last four years, Beijing's military has increased its activities in the strait.
EXPANDING MILITARY PRESENCE
Sailings through the waterway by foreign warships, especially American, are regularly condemned by Beijing, which says such missions "undermine peace and stability" in the region.
Germany, for whom both China and Taiwan, with its huge chip industry, are major trade partners, has joined other Western nations in expanding its military presence in the region as their alarm has grown over Beijing's territorial ambitions.
In 2021, a German warship sailed through the South China Sea, for the first time in almost 20 years.
Last month, the Luftwaffe deployed fighter jets to Japan for the first joint drills there.
Schulz said he was not planning for any specific security measures should the warships under his command cross the Taiwan Strait, calling it a "normal passage" similar to sailing through the English Channel or the North Sea.
However, he anticipated any passage would be closely monitored.
"I expect the Chinese navy and potentially the coastguard or maritime militia to escort us," he said, describing this as common practice.