Iran demands US make first goodwill move amid push for nuclear talks

The status of talks to renew the 2015 Iran nuclear deal hung in the air
on Friday, with a US offer to come back to the table met by Iranian demands
that US sanctions have to be lifted before that can happen.
"There can be no nuclear
meeting together with the US because the US has pulled out of the Vienna
nuclear agreement," Foreign Ministry spokesperson Saeed Khatibzadeh wrote
on Twitter.
Iran wouldn't react on what was "yesterday" but on concrete
actions, Khatibzadeh said.
Nevertheless, the offer to accept a European Union invitation for a
return to talks from the administration of US President Joe Biden is a
significant step, after four years during which the Trump administration pulled
out of the deal and piled sanctions on Iran.
The deal was reached between the two countries - along with Britain,
China, France, Russia and the EU - in 2015 in an effort to convince Iran to
give up its nuclear weapons ambitions. The deal lifted sanctions in exchange
for Iran limiting itself to civilian nuclear applications.
But Trump said the deal still left Iran with a pathway to weapons
eventually and didn't do enough to keep it from interfering in the region. The
tough approach was applauded by Middle Eastern countries like Israel and Saudi
Arabia, which see Iran as a regional rival.
Since then, Iran has slowly backed out of the deal itself, and this week
said it would limit cooperation with international nuclear inspectors.
But it has left a door open to talks. On Friday, Iranian Foreign Minister
Mohammad Javad Zarif tweeted the hashtag #CommitActMeet, which the Foreign
Ministry explained on its Farsi Instagram page: If the US committed to its
obligations and lifted sanctions, Iran would be ready for a meeting with the US
and five other countries who brokered the 2015 nuclear deal with Iran.
Biden's administration previously called for diplomacy with Iran, but
insisted that Tehran must first return to full compliance with the nuclear deal.
However, on Thursday, the US rescinded a Trump administration attempt to
initiate snapback sanctions on Tehran through the United Nations Security
Council.
Russia on Friday welcomed the move.
The pressure of sanctions had clearly not contributed to the
implementation of the Vienna nuclear agreement with Iran and had also led to a
dead end, Kremlin spokesperson Dmitry Peskov was quoted as saying by news
agency Interfax.
"In this sense, this is
something positive," he said, adding that rejecting punitive measures was
"in itself a good thing."
Peskov said Russia had regretted the US withdrawal from the 2015 Vienna
nuclear agreement under Trump in 2018.
"We remain supporters of this
document and call on everyone to do everything for its effective
implementation," he said.
But Israel said it remains firmly committed to preventing Iran from
building nuclear weapons, the office of Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said
on Friday.
Israel's "position on the [Vienna] nuclear agreement has not
changed," it said in a statement.
"Israel believes that going
back to the old agreement will pave Iran's path to a nuclear arsenal,"
according to the prime minister's office.
Israel was in close contact with the US on this issue, it said in the
statement.
The US also lifted a Trump administration policy that placed extreme
travel restrictions on Iran's UN diplomats living in New York.
"Until we sit down and talk,
nothing's going to happen," a senior State Department official said in a
call with reporters on Thursday.
"It doesn't mean that when we
sit down and talk we're going to succeed, but we do know that if we don't take
that step, the situation's just going to go from bad to worse," the
official added.
On Thursday, Britain, France, Germany and the United States urged Tehran to not take any "dangerous" steps that would kill the embattled agreement.