Iran and Biden: Path to return lined with thorns

Following the end of former US President Donald Trump’s term, it seems that the Iranian regime’s optimism was exaggerated despite the different approach of the new US administration, but the road to returning to the nuclear agreement does not seem paved with roses, as the new administration is determined to confront Iranian terrorism in the Middle East and stop its expansion in the region.
Speaking about the features of the new administration’s foreign
policy, US Secretary of State Anthony Blinken affirmed that the Biden
administration will seek to reach a longer and stronger nuclear agreement with
Iran, describing the 2015 agreement as a "platform" for the launch
towards an agreement that includes other issues, extending to Iran's missile
program and its activities in the region.
Despite the ambiguity that still surrounds some aspects of
Biden’s agenda towards Iran and a return to the nuclear agreement, Treasury
Secretary Janet Yellen confirmed that the new administration will review the
sanctions imposed on Iran to ensure their effectiveness, stressing that the
Treasury is seeking to continue fighting Tehran's support of terrorism.
Just two days after Biden assumed office, Iranian Foreign
Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif published an article in Foreign Affairs magazine
about his country's view of how to save the agreement, which has become threatened
since the United States unilaterally withdrew from it in 2018.
Zarif said that the new government in Washington must make a
basic choice of whether to adopt the failed Trump administration’s policies and
continue along the path of contempt for international cooperation and law or
for Biden to choose a better path by ending the failed maximum pressure policy
adopted by Trump and returning to the agreement.
The Zarif article added that, in this case, Iran would in
turn return to the full implementation of its obligations contained within the
nuclear deal, but if Washington insists on extracting concessions, this
opportunity will be lost.
He indicated that the new US government could still salvage
the agreement, but that this would only happen if it was able to provide real
political will in Washington that would demonstrate that the United States is
prepared to be a reliable partner in a collective endeavor.
Zarif added that the Biden administration should begin by
unconditionally lifting all the sanctions imposed since Trump took office.
It is worth noting that the nuclear agreement guaranteed
Iran of an easing of the international sanctions imposed on it in exchange for
a significant reduction in its nuclear program and providing guarantees that it
did not intend to develop a nuclear bomb, but the agreement has been in threat
since the United States unilaterally withdrew from it in 2018 under the Trump
administration, which then reinstated harsh sanctions on Tehran. The return of
the sanctions caused the stagnation of Iran's economy, which has gradually
entered into stagnation since 2019.
Biden considers his predecessor’s policy towards Iran a
failure and has expressed his intention to return his country to the agreement,
but he stipulated that Iran return to its obligations, while Tehran has called
for the United States to first lift all the sanctions and honor all its
commitments.