Iran nuclear talks enter ‘drafting stage’

Solutions are still far away, but we agree on specific steps towards goal: Mikhail Ulyanov

April 19, 2021 04:35 pm | Updated 10:26 pm IST - Berlin:

Some progress: The meeting of the JCPOA Joint Commission in Vienna on Saturday to discuss the Iran nuclear deal.

Some progress: The meeting of the JCPOA Joint Commission in Vienna on Saturday to discuss the Iran nuclear deal.

High-level talks in Vienna aimed at bringing the U.S. back into the 2015 nuclear deal with Iran are moving ahead with experts working on drafting proposals this week, but a solution remains “far away,” Russia’s delegate said on Monday.

The U.S. unilaterally left the agreement, which promises Iran economic incentives in return for curbs on its nuclear programme, in 2018 under then President Donald Trump, who said it needed to be renegotiated and imposed crippling sanctions.

In response, Iran has steadily been violating the restrictions set by the deal, by enriching uranium far past the purity allowed and stockpiling vastly larger quantities, in a thus-far unsuccessful effort to force the other countries involved to provide economic relief that would offset the American sanctions.

U.S. President Joe Biden wants to return Washington to the deal, and Iran has been negotiating with the five remaining powers — Germany, France, Britain, China and Russia — for the past two weeks on how that might take place. Diplomats from the world powers have been shuttling between the Iranian delegation and an American one, which is also in Vienna but not talking directly with the Iranian side.

Two expert groups have been brainstorming solutions to the two major issues: The rollback of American sanctions on one hand, and Iran’s return to compliance on the other.

Now, said Russian representative Mikhail Ulyanov, “we can note with satisfaction that the negotiations (are) entering the drafting stage.”

“Practical solutions are still far away, but we have moved from general words to agreeing on specific steps towards the goal,” he wrote on Twitter.

“Overall, we may be, and hopefully are on a path of rapprochement,” German Foreign Ministry spokeswoman Maria Adebahr told reporters in Berlin.

“But there are still many, many open questions,” she added.

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