Iran’s Negotiator Says No Nuclear Deal This Week
Abbas Aragchi, Iran's chief negotiator at international talks on its nuclear program, said late Saturday he did not think they could conclude this week, ahead of the country's June 18 presidential election.
Russia's representative at the talks
made a similar point after emerging from talks in the Austrian capital Vienna,
saying a few more weeks were required to finalize the existing text, according
to a statement on Twitter.
"Personally, I don't think that we can manage to
reach a conclusion this week," Aragchi told the Iranian state broadcaster
after the sixth round of talks resumed in Vienna.
Iranians will vote on June 18 to
elect a successor to President Hassan Rouhani, who has served the maximum two
consecutive four-year terms allowed by the constitution.
Several analysts have already said
it was unlikely any deal would be concluded before the election was over.
Representatives from Britain,
China, France, Germany, Russia and Iran are meeting in Vienna to bring the US
back to the Iran nuclear deal and Tehran back into compliance with it.
The deal, or JCPoA, imposed strict
limits on Iran's nuclear activities designed to extend the time Tehran would
need to obtain enough fissile material for a nuclear weapon, if it chose to, to
at least a year from two to three months.
The 2015 landmark accord has been
hanging by a thread since US President Donald Trump took the United States out
of the deal in 2018 and re-imposed sanctions. That led Tehran to step up its
nuclear activities, long curtailed by the deal.
US President Joe Biden has
indicated a willingness to rejoin the agreement once it is sure Iran is willing
to respect its commitments.
Negotiators from the US are taking part indirectly in the EU-chaired discussions in Vienna.