Iran says realistic attitude needed from West to revive JCPOA deal

2022-03-03 17:51:25
Iran says realistic attitude needed from West to revive JCPOA deal

Iran’s foreign minister has underlined the significance of the remaining issues at the Vienna talks, saying the Western parties need to get realistic to reach an agreement on reviving the 2015 Iran deal.

“Tehran has unveiled many initiatives to resolve the issue so far, and now reaching an agreement requires a political decision and a realistic attitude from the West,” Hossein Amir-Abdollahian said during a phone conversation with his Chinese counterpart, Wang Yi, on Wednesday.

He stressed the need for the outcome of the Vienna process to safeguard Iran’s national interests, including in the economic sphere.

In recent days, diplomats participating in the eighth round of negotiations in the Austrian capital have said that “a deal is within reach” provided that the remaining, narrowed-down issues are resolved.

The Vienna talks began last April between Iran and the other parties to the Iran deal on the assumption that the US, under the Joe Biden administration, is willing to repeal the so-called maximum pressure policy against Tehran.

Former US president Donald Trump instigated the maximum pressure campaign after he pulled the US out of the Iran deal, officially called the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action (JCPOA), in 2018 and unleashed what he called the “toughest ever” sanctions against the Islamic Republic.

One key issue on which Iran and the US are now in agreement is that the maximum pressure campaign of sanctions has failed.

In recent months, the United States and its three major European allies have repeatedly warned that there are “only a few weeks left” to strike a deal that would salvage the original JCPOA, warning to walk away from the talks.

On the other side, Iran has remained calm and voiced readiness to ink a “good agreement” immediately, but at the same time, it has asserted that it would not agree to a flawed deal.

The Islamic Republic has made clear that it wants “an airtight deal” bereft of any loopholes that the Americans and the Europeans could exploit again.

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