“An agreement of this kind is neither imminent nor certain,” said Tuesday the spokesman for the American diplomacy Ned Price, who had already issued such a warning the day before. “There are a number of difficult topics that we are still trying to resolve,” he added.
According to him, “the ball is in Tehran’s court” to make “difficult” decisions – which Washington has said for its part “ready” to assume.
The change in tone is clear.
At the beginning of March, after eleven months of complicated talks, a compromise seemed imminent in Vienna between the great powers and Iran to resuscitate this agreement supposed to prevent it from acquiring the atomic bomb.
Then new Russian demands, linked to Western sanctions against Moscow for the war in Ukraine, forced the negotiators into a pause. But once this obstacle was removed, the road seemed almost clear, so much so that Washington estimated, less than a week ago, to be “close” to a breakthrough.
Negotiators hoped to conclude after the festive period of Nowruz, the Iranian New Year which was celebrated on Sunday.
The 2015 Iran nuclear deal had lifted economic sanctions against Iran in exchange for restrictions on its nuclear activities to ensure, under international supervision, that they remained strictly civilian and peaceful. But under the presidency of Donald Trump, who found it insufficient, the United States left the agreement in 2018 and reinstated its sanctions.
In response, Tehran has freed itself from the key limits to its atomic program.
Since the arrival of Joe Biden at the White House last year, negotiations have been underway to save this agreement, by lifting American sanctions against an Iranian return in the nails of the text.
According to a source familiar with the matter, Tehran is demanding the removal of the Revolutionary Guards — the ideological army of the Iranian Islamic Republic — from the US blacklist of “foreign terrorist organizations”, and this demand is one of the last obstacles to a compromise.
“All Scenarios”
“It’s a tricky point,” Democratic Senator Tim Kaine admitted on Tuesday after a closed parliamentary hearing with US envoy for Iran Rob Malley.
A fervent supporter of a negotiated solution, Democratic Senator Chris Murphy said keeping the “Guardians” on the blacklist had “no practical consequences”, suggesting that Washington could afford the concession.
“The information reaching us from Vienna is disturbing at best, and I am flabbergasted by the concessions that the government is ready to make”, reacted on the contrary his Republican colleague Jim Risch, referring to the lifting of sanctions for “90 to 130 billion dollars” and the cancellation of the blacklisting of the Revolutionary Guards.
Because the American right and Israel, hostile to the 2015 agreement and therefore to its revival, have made this last question a red line, putting the Biden administration in a certain embarrassment.
Is his firmness of the last few days aimed at avoiding a lawsuit in weakness as an agreement approaches?
Be that as it may, as in late 2021 when the talks seemed — already — deadlocked, the Americans began again to brandish the threat of “alternative” options.
“President Biden has pledged that Iran, as long as he is in power, will not be allowed to possess a nuclear weapon”, “with the agreement or without agreement”, hammered Ned Price on Monday.
“We have prepared for all hypotheses, for all scenarios”, including the death of the 2015 agreement, he added on Tuesday, assuring that this had been discussed with Washington’s allies in the Middle East and Europe.
However, he refrained from specifying the outlines of such a plan B.
In the fall, Secretary of State Antony Blinken warned that the United States was considering “all options” in the event of diplomatic failure, without excluding the use of force.
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