France Says G7 Leaders To Discuss Iran Nuclear Talks Revival
British and French foreign ministers in a G7 meeting in December
G7 leaders will discuss the prospect of reviving the Iran nuclear talks after the European Union's foreign policy chief met senior officials in Tehran, a French presidency official said on Sunday.
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Iran's indirect talks with the United States on reviving the 2015 nuclear pact will resume soon, the Iranian foreign minister said on Saturday amid a push by Josep Borrell to break a months-long impasse.
The official said discussions would take place on Sunday at a dinner between the leaders of the Group of Seven rich nations with more detailed talks taking place on Tuesday morning between France, Britain, Germany and the United States.
The three European powers are parties to the nuclear deal, which then-US President Donald Trump pulled out of in 2018.
The pact appeared close to being revived in March after 11 months of talks, when the process came to a halt. Tehran insisted that Washington remove the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC), its elite security force, from the U.S. Foreign Terrorist Organization list.
"Talks have intensified between our teams," said the French official, adding that it was crucial to revive the pact for the nuclear non-proliferation benefits, regional security and also to see how it all fits into the question of high oil prices.
Israel has reportedly critized Borrell's trrip to Tehran and the revivial of the JCPOA, which it regards as inadequate in preventing Tehran from acquiring nuclear weapons.
Qatar is more likely to be the venue of talks between Washington and Tehran to revive the 2015 nuclear deal, a website close to Iran’s security council said Sunday.
A two-day visit by the European Union’s foreign policy chief Josep Borrell to Tehran appeared to have succeeded on Saturday in convincing Iran to have talks with the United States to resolve remaining differences that have blocked an agreement to revive the JCPOA.
The key factor that prevented an agreement in Vienna in March, when year-long talks came to a standstill, is Iran’s demand for the removal of its Revolutionary Guard from a US terrorist list.
There is no official word from Washington yet, if the Biden Administration agrees with a formula to hold talks with Iran apparently outside the JCPOA framework. What Borrell seems to have agreed with Iran would probably exclude Russia and China, two of the original JCPOA signatories from this round of talks.
Washington might be waiting for a briefing by Borrell to see the details of his discussions with the Iranians, but some coordination must have taken place before the EU foreign policy chief flew to Tehran on Friday.
US Special envoy for Iran and chief nuclear negotiator, Rob Malley, was in Brussels before Borrell’s trip and a tweet on Thursday [June23] showed him having dinner with Borrell and his deputy Enrique Mora.
Israel’s Channel 12 television quoted a security official as saying that Israel has objected to the prospect of the JCPOA being revived in the near future. The source said that restoring the 2015 agreement in its current form would be “very bad” for Israel.
Israel says that the JCPOA’s sunset clauses would mature in a few years and Iran would be free to expand its nuclear program and build atomic weapons. The deal was weak from the beginning when the Obama administration negotiated it, Israel has always argued and supported for President Donald Trump’s decision to withdraw from the agreement in 2018.
Saudi Arabia and its Arab allies, although less vocal publicly, are equally alarmed not only at Iran’s nuclear program but also for its aggressive regional behavior, arming and supporting militant groups.
Washington is said to be working to lead a regional alliance of Israel, Saudi Arabia and other Arab countries to contain Iran. Israeli officials said this week that work is in progress to set up a joint air defense system between these countries, led by the US.
Iran’s Shamkhani told Borrell that Iran will further develop its nuclear programme until the West changes its "illegal behavior".
"Iran's retaliatory actions in the nuclear sector are merely legal and rational responses to US unilateralism and European inaction and will continue as long as the West's illegal practices are not changed," Shamkhani said, without elaborating.
And despite the imminent resumption of talks, Borrell appeared to play down the possibility of a quick deal.
"I cannot predict ... We are pushing for it. I appreciate the goodwill from the Iranian side. There is also goodwill from the American side," Borrell said in a news conference on an EU website.
Accounts differed Saturday on whether Joseph Borrell, the EU lead foreign policy official, had claimed tangible progress in reviving the 2015 Iran nuclear deal.
In a joint news conference in Tehran with Iranian Foreign Minister Hossein Amir-Abdollahian, Borrell, the European Union High Representative for Foreign Affairs and Security Policy, spoke of resuming negotiations “speedily.”
There was no clarification from either Borrell or Amir-Abdollahian, whose news conference followed a three-and-a-half hour meeting, as to what changes would break the impasse that in March paused year-long talks in Vienna.
Borrell – according to IRNA, Iran’s official news agency – said the talks had lapsed with outstanding questions “that Iran and the United States were supposed to answer,” but neither he nor Amir-Abdollahian gave any indication Saturday that Tehran or Washington had answered these questions.
One outstanding matter is reportedly the US designation of Iran’s Revolutionary Guards (IRGC) as a ‘foreign terrorist organization,’ which highlights wider disagreement between Washington and Tehran over which US sanctions violate the JCPOA.
“This [delay in the Vienna talks] was not supposed to be three months,” Borrell said, according to IRNA. “But today the talks should resume, and this is a decision to be made by Tehran and Washington.”
Different words from Borrell were cited by Reuters. "We are expected to resume talks in the coming days and break the impasse,” was the agency’s account. “I am very happy about the decision that has been made in Tehran and Washington.” These words have fed wider media reports of agreement to resume talks, including with the US.
According to IRNA, Borrell said that after his Tehran trip Tehran talks “will resume, and my team will be there.” Borrell was quoted in some media that these talks would not be in Vienna but in the Persian Gulf.
‘Possibility'
But IRNA also reported from New York a “State Department source” expressing “appreciation for the efforts of Joseph Borrell,” as Washington awaited “consultation with him about his talks in Tehran.” IRNA’s source referred to the “possibility of resuming indirect talks with Iran.”
The US and Iran have since March have placed the onus for reaching agreement firmly on the other and have traded accusations that the other had raised demands unrelated to the JCPOA. Amir-Abdollahian appeared to restate this Saturday in expressing “hope” that “the American side will this time realistically and fairly engage in committed and responsible acts towards reaching the final point of an agreement.”
The Iranian foreign minister called his meeting with Borrell “long but positive.” Amir-Abdollahian stressed the importance of links between Iran and the “European continent…especially in trade relations,” a remark suggesting the EU was floating trade incentives for Iran should there be agreement on reviving the 2015 deal, the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action (JCPOA).
New incentives?
The three European JCPOA signatories – France, Germany, and the United Kingdom – condemned President Donald Trump in 2018 for withdrawing from the agreement and imposing ‘maximum pressure’ sanctions that threatened punitive action against third parties trading with Iran. But the EU’s financial mechanism designed to protect European-Iran trade, Instex, proved ineffective as European companies ended commercial links.
There have been recent suggestions of Europe offering Tehran new economic incentives, including in the energy sector, should the JCPOA be restored, potentially soothing Iranian fears over the impact of the US again leaving the agreement.
Borrell later met Ali Shamkhani, Secretary of Iran’s Supreme National Security Council (SNSC), who said the "Iran's retaliatory actions in the nuclear sector” were “merely legal and ratinal responses to US unilateralism and European inaction” and would “continue as long as the West's illegal practices are not changed." The EU announced Borrell’s visit Friday as a two-day trip.
Data released by Tehran show the economy has grown more than 4 percent over the last year, driven by high oil prices and loose enforcement of U.S. sanctions.
This relatively strong economic growth can partially explain Tehran’s current stonewalling of nuclear negotiations with the Biden administration, as Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei likely does not feel massive pressure to secure sanctions relief by striking a deal. If Washington were to reinvigorate its sanctions enforcement, however, it could reverse the Islamic Republic’s economic fortunes, stoke political instability within Iran, and pressure Khamenei to surrender.
According to Iran’s Statistics Center, the country’s GDP grew by 4.3 percent during the Persian calendar year 1400 (April 2021 to March 2022). The growth rate in the previous year was one percent. Almost all major sectors of the economy grew. Oil and gas saw the fastest growth rate, at 9.7 percent. The service sector, the largest sector of Iran’s economy, grew by 4.5 percent after having shrunk by 1.3 percent the previous year. This growth, however, does not mean that the economy is doing well. The real GDP is still below its March 2018 level, the point-to-point inflation was 52.5 percent in June, and the country faces daily protests and strikes over low wages and high inflation.
Several factors explain this higher growth. First, since taking office in January 2021, President Joe Biden has abandoned his predecessor’s policy of “maximum pressure” against Iran, leading to loose enforcement of U.S. sanctions against the Islamic Republic. Iran exported $48 billionworth of non-oil goods during the Persian year of 1400, the most in the country’s history. This trend has continued throughout the first two months of 1401 (April and May 2022), during which time Tehran exported 40 percent more oil year-over-year.
The Ieranian delegation at the Vienna talks. November 29, 2021
Meanwhile, Iran’s economy has benefited from higher prices of commodities, particularly oil and oil-based goods such as petrochemicals. The Islamic Republic also managed to replace some imported goods by expanding domestic production, in turn boosting Iran’s manufacturing and mining sectors. Finally, the removal of pandemic-related restrictions, combined with public optimism about reaching a deal with the United States to end sanctions, contributed to the growth in the service sector.
Iran’s renewed economic growth likely helps explain why Khamenei is in no rush to reach a nuclear deal with Biden. Loose U.S. sanctions enforcement has allowed Khamenei to reap economic benefits while expanding his nuclear program and eroding Washington’s leverage over Tehran.
Fortunately for the United States, however, Iran’s economy — and thus Khamenei’s negotiating position — remains fragile. If oil prices remain high and U.S. sanctions enforcement remains lackluster, the Islamic Republic could probably achieve 3to 5 percent growth this year. But a U.S. return to “maximum pressure” would likely see Iran’s economy return to meager or negative growth rates.
One sign of this fragility is that Iranian economic growth decelerated toward the end of the year, with GDP growing by just 2.3 percent during the last quarter (spring of 2022) compared to 6.9 percent during the first quarter (winter of 2021). That trend held true across most economic sectors. For example, whereas the oil and gas sector grew by 27.4 percent in the first quarter, its growth rate dropped to 0.5 percent in the fourth quarter. Likewise, the real estate sector grew 15.3 percent in the first quarter but shrank by 3.4 percent in the last quarter.
A teachers' protest for higher wages amid high inflation. December 23, 2021
Moreover, the Islamic Republic has suffered from high inflationsince late 2018, reducing purchasing power. This means that domestic consumption and demand are fragile. If the Biden administration tightens sanctions enforcement, consumer and investor pessimism will push down investment and consumption. The result will be a slowdown in economic activity and lower or negative GDP growth.
That economic downturn could exacerbate Iran’s ongoing socio-political instability, toppling his regime or increasing Khamenei’s incentive to reach a deal with Washington. Since 2017, the country has faced two waves of massive protests. In November 2019, the regime killed at least 1,500 protesters in less than a week to survive the most widespread protests of its history. Government restrictions and self-imposed isolation during COVID-19 slowed down the protests, but as those impediments faded, protests and worker strikes began again in 2021 and gained momentum in 2022. The protests and strikes now occurring daily across Iran reflect deep societal discontent, which can both signal and create economic troubles.
If the Biden administration continues with the status quo, it can expect Tehran to continue stonewalling, eliminating any chance of reaching an acceptable nuclear deal. Conversely, reviving maximum pressure could force Khamenei to play ball. With the Islamic Republic edging closer and closer toward a nuclear weapon, Biden doesn’t have any time
Saeed Ghasseminejad, who contributed this opinion article is a senior advisor on Iran and financial economics at the Foundation for Defense of Democracies (FDD), where he contributes to FDD’s Iran Programand Center on Economic and Financial Power(CEFP). Follow Saeed on Twitter @SGhasseminejad. FDD is a Washington, DC-based, non-partisan research institute focusing on national security and foreign policy.
The opinions expressed by the author are not necessarily the views of Iran International.
One of the suspects who was arrested in relation to the assassination of Iranian nuclear scientist Mohsen Fakhrizadeh has been freed on a bail of 250 billion rials (over $830 thousand).
Kurdish human rights group Hengaw said on Friday that Jamal Abdollahi, who is accused of helping the perpetrators in the assassination in November 2020 to flee Iran, was "temporarily" released on Thursday after 14 months of imprisonment in one of the security detention centers of the Revolutionary Guard in Tehran.
He was arrested along with his brother in April 2021 and was denied access to a lawyer during the past 14 months. His brother Kamal is still behind bars.
They are accused of helping some of the perpetrators escape through the border near the city of Baneh in Kurdistan province, but they were never tried over the charges.
Iran blames Israel for the assassination of Fakhrizadeh, said to had been Iran’s top nuclear man, in a highly complicated operation east of the capital Tehran involving a remote-controlled one-ton automated weapon that had been smuggled into the country in pieces.
Iran has also accused Israel of sabotage operations against its nuclear facilities including an explosion in April 2021 that inflicted major damage to the Natanz uranium enrichment site.
Israel has never officially taken responsibility for any of these assassinations and sabotage operations but also has never denied involvement.
The European Union foreign policy chief travels to Tehran today in the latest effort to restart talks aimed at restoring the 2015 Iran nuclear deal.
The EU announced the two-day trip of Josep Borrell as part of his role as “co-ordinator of the JCPOA,” referring to the 2015 deal in his official title as the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action. Year-long talks in Vienna over reviving the JCPOA paused without success in March, reportedly due to disagreement between the United States and Iran, including over Washington listing Iran’s Revolutionary Guards as a ‘foreign terrorist organization.’
The EU foreign policy chief is due to meet Iranian foreign minister, Hossein Amir-Abdollahian, who has just hosted Russian foreign minister Sergei Lavrov in Tehran. “Bilateral relations, regional and international issues, as well as the latest status of sanctions lifting will be discussed during the visit, which is part of the ongoing consultations between Iran and the European Union,” Iranian Foreign Ministry Spokesperson Saeed Khatibzadeh said.
European officials have expressed impatience over the impasse in the Vienna talks, while Russia, which has always voiced support for the JCPOA, may want to avert another crisis as it copes with the consequences of the Ukraine war.
While US President Joe Biden came into office committed to restore the JCPOA, from which his predecessor Donald Trump withdrew the US in 2018, he has kept in place Trump’s ‘maximum pressure’ sanctions and his officials have rejected Iran’s request to remove all sanctions introduced by Trump, including the IRGC listing.
Biden has also, partly in an effort to persuade Saudi Arabia to pump more oil and ease upward pressure on US gasoline prices, softened his previously critical approach to Riyadh, especially over human rights and the Yemen war. Both JCPOA opponents, Saudi Arabia and Israel want US support for great military co-operation, including air defense, against Iran and its regional allies.
Welcoming Borrell’s visit, Iran’s official news agency IRNA quoted Peter Stano, the EU’s lead spokesperson on foreign affairs, that the trip was part of continuing efforts to achieve “full implementation” of the JCPOA.
There has been a raft of speculation – briefing and counter-briefing– that Iran is ready to soften its stance over the IRGC listing in order to ease sanctions through restoring the JCPOA. While Iran has not let up on efforts to expand trade with Russia and Asia, and is benefiting from the rising price of oil, the Iranian rial Friday hovered around 320,000 to the dollar, showing no market optimism over JCPOA revival.