US Still Unsure If Iran Wants to Respect Nuclear Deal
The United States, which has for two months been holding indirect talks with Iran on the future of a tattered 2015 nuclear deal, said Monday it was not even sure if Tehran really wanted to come back into compliance.
"We've been engaged in indirect conversations,
as you know, for the last couple of months, and it remains unclear whether Iran
is willing and prepared to do what it needs to do to come back into
compliance," Secretary of State Antony Blinken told the House Foreign
Affairs Committee.
"We're still testing that proposition,"
Blinken said, AFP reported.
Former US president Donald Trump
pulled out of the Iran nuclear deal in 2018, claiming that it did not do enough
to prevent the Islamic republic from building a nuclear weapon.
Trump tightened sanctions on
Tehran, and the Iranian authorities responded by gradually rolling back their
commitments under the deal.
President Joe Biden has said he
would rejoin the agreement if Iran lives up to its side of the bargain.
The two sides have been
negotiating in Vienna since April through the other parties to the deal --
Britain, China, France, Germany and Russia.
The talks are scheduled to resume
later this week in the Austrian capital.
"We're not even at the stage of returning to compliance
for compliance," Blinken said. "We don't know if that's actually
going to happen."
Iranian Foreign Minister Mohammad
Javad Zarif responded to Blinken's comments on Monday.
"It remains unclear whether (Biden and Blinken)
are ready to bury the failed 'maximum pressure' policy of Trump... and cease
using #EconomicTerrorism as bargaining 'leverage'," he tweeted.
Iran "is in compliance"
with the nuclear deal, he added, citing an article that allows one side to drop
its commitments if the other party fails to abide by the accord.
"Time to change course," Zarif wrote, without elaborating.