Iran Divided Over Araghchi’s Call for New Nuclear Talks

Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi. (AFP)
Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi. (AFP)
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Iran Divided Over Araghchi’s Call for New Nuclear Talks

Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi. (AFP)
Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi. (AFP)

Iranian newspapers are split over the first comments made by new Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi about the 2015 nuclear deal and whether it can be revived to lift US sanctions.

On Sunday, Araghchi denied that the deal between Iran and world powers is “dead,” walking back from earlier comments suggesting the agreement was finished and needed new negotiations.

His remarks came in his first TV interview after taking office last Wednesday.

The nuclear deal fell apart after former US President Donald Trump withdrew from it in 2018, criticizing it for not addressing Iran's regional activities, especially its ballistic missile program.

In response, Iran gradually stopped complying with the deal, including significantly increasing uranium enrichment after President Joe Biden took office.

Efforts by the Biden administration to revive the deal failed after six rounds of negotiations in Vienna, led by Araghchi, and further talks with Iran’s previous government.

The diplomatic process stalled further with the Ukraine war and Iran’s growing isolation after mass protests in September 2022.

During his election campaign, President Masoud Pezeshkian promised to lift sanctions and improve living conditions, criticizing a 2020 law that allowed Iran to further pull away from the deal.

However, after winning the elections, Pezeshkian, and former Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif, pledged to follow domestic laws in any negotiations.

Araghchi, too, affirmed his commitment to these laws in parliament and noted that reviving the nuclear talks would be harder now due to changing international conditions, such as the Ukraine war and conflict in Gaza.

He suggested that if the deal is to be revived, it would need amendments, which would be challenging.

Later, Araghchi clarified that his comments did not mean the deal was dead and that Iran would continue negotiations, consulting with other parties to protect Iranian interests.

His remarks came after phone calls with his counterparts in France, Germany, the UK, and the EU’s foreign policy chief.

The reformist newspaper Sazandegi reported that Araghchi told European officials the current deal couldn’t be revived without changes.

Meanwhile, the hardline Khorasan daily highlighted the challenges Araghchi faces, including the expiration of a related UN Security Council resolution in October.

The newspaper Farhikhtegan, linked to a top adviser to Iran's Supreme Leader, questioned the value of new negotiations.

An analyst suggested that Iran's foreign policy remains consistent despite government changes, with Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei having the final say.

The reformist Arman-e Melli newspaper accused opponents of the deal of distracting from Araghchi's comments and suggested that the new government would pursue national interests if not obstructed.

Some lawmakers who previously opposed the deal now support reviving talks, but one political analyst argued that the deal is effectively dead and cannot be brought back.



German Chancellor Vows from Solingen to Prevent Another Stabbing Attack

North Rhine-Westphalia state premier Hendrik Wuest, Solingen mayor Tim Kurzbach and German Chancellor Olaf Scholz pay their respects at the site where three people were killed and several injured in a stabbing attack at a festival, in Solingen, Germany. (Reuters/Jana Rodenbusch)
North Rhine-Westphalia state premier Hendrik Wuest, Solingen mayor Tim Kurzbach and German Chancellor Olaf Scholz pay their respects at the site where three people were killed and several injured in a stabbing attack at a festival, in Solingen, Germany. (Reuters/Jana Rodenbusch)
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German Chancellor Vows from Solingen to Prevent Another Stabbing Attack

North Rhine-Westphalia state premier Hendrik Wuest, Solingen mayor Tim Kurzbach and German Chancellor Olaf Scholz pay their respects at the site where three people were killed and several injured in a stabbing attack at a festival, in Solingen, Germany. (Reuters/Jana Rodenbusch)
North Rhine-Westphalia state premier Hendrik Wuest, Solingen mayor Tim Kurzbach and German Chancellor Olaf Scholz pay their respects at the site where three people were killed and several injured in a stabbing attack at a festival, in Solingen, Germany. (Reuters/Jana Rodenbusch)

The German government is under pressure to draw lessons and act after a Syrian migrant from Deir Ezzor killed three people and injured eight others in a fatal knife attack in the city of Solingen, later claimed by ISIS.

During a visit to the city three days after the incident, Chancellor Olaf Scholz said the attack would not be repeated.

He said his government was looking at more ways to increase the rate of deportations and also promised tougher weapons and knife laws.

A joint working group from the federal government and local authorities will be established to discuss and determine steps to accelerate the deportation of refugees whose requests were rejected, he added.

“We will have to do everything we can to ensure that those who cannot and are not allowed to stay in Germany are repatriated and deported,” Scholz told reporters.

Authorities had planned to deport the suspect in Friday's attack to Bulgaria last year under European Union asylum rules, according to German media.

But officials say when they tried to deport him, they could not locate him and he remained in Germany.

After he disappeared for six months, which is the legal period for authorities to deport him, he returned and registered himself in Solingen and obtained the “right of temporary protection.”

The German opposition has been demanding an end to taking in refugees from Syria and Afghanistan and to deport migrants who have committed serious crimes.

Berlin has no diplomatic ties with the governments of both countries, which means it can't coordinate any deportations to them.

Leader of the conservative Christian Democratic Union (CDU), Friedrich Merz, called for an immediate halt to the admission of refugees from Syria and Afghanistan.

He said the Solingen attack should be a “turning point” in the policies of the socialist-led government, which also includes ministers from the Greens and Liberals.

Last June, a new citizenship law entered into force in Germany. It allowed the government to reduce the minimum period of German residence necessary for naturalization to five years (and even three years in exceptional circumstances), down from eight years.

It also allowed German citizens to hold multiple citizenships whereas currently, dual citizenship is possible only in rare circumstances.

General Secretary of the Social Democratic Party of Germany (SPD), Kevin Kühnert, said many of Merz's proposals stood in contrast to the country's constitution, known as the Basic Law, which upholds the individual's right to asylum, for example.

“The answer can't be that we now slam the door in the face of people who are themselves fleeing from extremists because they are being persecuted by them for their way of life,” Kühnert said.

He said as far as was known, Bulgaria had been prepared to accept the man.

“The federal states are responsible for deportations in Germany, which in this case would have been North Rhine Westphalia,” Kühnert said, referring to the western state where Solingen is located.

He called on state authorities to examine why no action had been taken in the man's case.

Amid this controversy, ISIS released a video on its Amaq news site showing a man covering his face with only his eyes visible. The man was filmed saying he is behind the stabbing in Solingen and that he was ready to carry out an operation in revenge for “Bosnia, Iraq and Palestine.”

It remains unclear whether the man himself carried out the attack in Germany.