Biden Promised to Restore the Iran Nuclear Deal. Now It Risks Derailment.
WASHINGTON — Days before a new hard-line
president is set to be inaugurated in Iran, Biden administration officials have
turned sharply pessimistic about their chances of quickly restoring the nuclear
deal that President Donald J. Trump dismantled, fearing that the new government
in Tehran is speeding ahead on nuclear research and production and preparing
new demands for the United States.
The concerns are a reversal from just a
month ago, when American negotiators, based in part on assurances from the
departing Iranian government, believed they were on the cusp of reaching a deal
before Ebrahim Raisi, 60, a deeply conservative former head of the judiciary,
takes office on Thursday. In June, they were so confident that another round of
talks was imminent that a leading American negotiator left his clothes in
storage at a hotel in Vienna, where the talks took place through European
intermediaries for the past four months.
That session never happened. International
inspectors have been virtually blinded. At Iran’s major enrichment site at
Natanz, centrifuges are spinning at supersonic speeds, beginning to enrich
small amounts of nuclear fuel at near bomb-grade. Elsewhere, some uranium is
being turned to metallic form — for medical purposes, the Iranians insist,
though the technology is also useful for forming warheads.
It is unclear whether Mr. Raisi will retain
the existing Iranian negotiating team or replace them with his own loyalists,
who will presumably be determined to show they can drive a harder bargain,
getting more sanctions relief in return for temporary limits on Iran’s nuclear
activities.
“There’s a real risk here that they come back with unrealistic demands
about what they can achieve in these talks,” Robert Malley, the lead American
negotiator, said in an interview.
Both sides have much to lose if the
diplomacy fails. For President Biden, getting the 2015 nuclear accord back on
track is a top goal, in hopes of containing, once more, a nuclear program that
has resumed with a vengeance three years after Mr. Trump withdrew from it. It
is also critical to Mr. Biden’s effort to restore damaged relations with
European allies, who negotiated the original deal, along with the United
States, Russia and China.
Mr. Biden’s aides make no secret of their
concerns that the Iranians are learning so much from the work now underway that
in the near future, perhaps as early as this fall, it may be impossible to
return to the old accord. “At that point, we will have to reassess the way
forward,” Mr. Malley said. “We hope it doesn’t come to that.”
For years, Mr. Raisi was an advocate of
what Iranians call the “resistance economy,” based on the argument that Iran
does not need trade with the world and had no need to open up. But during the
campaign, he seemed to endorse restoring the deal, perhaps because he was under
pressure to show that, unlike his predecessors, he has the skill and toughness
to get rid of the American-led sanctions that have ravaged his country’s
economy.
Now the economic burdens, worsened by a
fifth wave of the coronavirus and water shortages that are partly the result of
government mismanagement, have set off violent protests.
The new president will not be the final
word on whether the deal is restored. That judgment still belongs to Iran’s
supreme leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, who is believed to have lined up the
support for Mr. Raisi’s election. And on Wednesday, the ayatollah echoed a key
demand: that the United States provide a guarantee that it can never again walk
away from the pact the way Mr. Trump did.
“They once violated the nuclear deal at no cost by exiting it,” Ayatollah
Khamenei said. “Now they explicitly say that they cannot give guarantees that
it would not happen again.”
In fact, Secretary of State Antony J.
Blinken and Mr. Malley have said that in a democracy, there is no way to tie
the hands of a future president and that the best way to preserve the deal is
to show that it is working for both sides. “There is no such thing as a
guarantee; that’s not in the nature of diplomacy,” Mr. Malley said. “But we
don’t have any intent — the president doesn’t have any intent — of spending all
these months negotiating a return to the deal in order to then withdraw.”
But the Iranians have found some sympathy,
even among America’s European allies, for their argument, especially among
those who fear that if Mr. Biden does not run for a second term, or a
Trump-like figure gets elected, the accord could be blown up again.
“If it happened once, it could happen again,” one senior European
diplomat involved in the negotiations said.
The new pessimism is a sharp change from a
month ago. The departing government, led by President Hassan Rouhani and the
foreign minister, Mohammad Javad Zarif, knew their legacies were tied to the
nuclear accord they negotiated for more than two years with President Barack
Obama and the secretary of state at the time, John Kerry. In Vienna, the Iranians
said they believed they had the authority to wrap up talks before Mr. Raisi was
inaugurated, so that he could start afresh — and blame anything that went wrong
in enforcing the accord on the incompetence of the old government.
They were wrong. The sixth round of
negotiations, which ended with what one American official called “a
near-complete agreement,” was followed by silence — and a refusal by the
Iranians to return to Vienna. It is unclear when talks might resume.
Meanwhile, what has happened on the ground
in Natanz, and in small research labs around the country, has the United States
worried. The most visible problem, though in some ways the easiest to reverse,
is that Iran has ratcheted up its production of nuclear fuel over the past two
years, and now possesses far more fuel than it did before Mr. Trump pulled out
of the agreement. At the time, he declared that Iran would return to the table,
begging for a new deal.
It never did while Mr. Trump was in office,
and by late last year, according to many reports, he was seeking options from
the Pentagon to bomb the country’s nuclear facilities. The Pentagon resisted,
and even the biggest Iran hawk in the administration, Secretary of State Mike
Pompeo, argued against military action.
If the deal is restored, most of that newly
enriched uranium could be shipped out of the country, which is what happened
when the first accord was put together. Far more worrying, officials said, is
the scientific knowledge that Iran is steadily gaining by building more
advanced centrifuges and experimenting with enriching uranium to 60 percent,
just shy of what is needed for a weapon.
“The longer the nonimplementation goes on, the more knowledge we will
get,” a senior Iranian official said. “If the U.S. is concerned, the earlier it
comes back the better.”
In 2015, the Obama administration was able
to claim that if Iran raced to produce nuclear fuel for a bomb — called a
“nuclear breakout” — it would take at least a year. That time frame, officials
now concede, is down to a few months.
The United States, for its part, has
reportedly agreed that if Iran lives by the 2015 accord, more than 1,000 sanctions
could be lifted — including on the country’s central bank. Ali Vaez, who
directs the Iran project at the International Crisis Group, said the United
States still had some space to offer even more sanctions relief, including on
some of Ayatollah Khamenei’s close associates, and on some members of the
Islamic Revolutionary Guards Corps, which the Trump administration declared a
foreign terrorist organization in 2019.
Working out the sequenced timing of
limiting the Iranian centrifuges and American sanctions remains a sticking
point, officials said. So is Iran’s demand that the United States not resume
sanctions for the duration of President Biden’s term — a guarantee that the
Americans would not make.
Mr. Vaez said Iran’s insistence that the
Biden administration promise to not reimpose sanctions was somewhat
understandable. Without it, he said, foreign banks and other businesses will
not risk investing in Iran — and thus Tehran would never receive the economic
benefits it believes it was promised.
But the Biden administration knows that
whatever deal it strikes will be a political problem in Washington. In 2015,
all Republicans and a good number of influential Democrats criticized the
original accord as insufficiently tough. So there is no way, officials say,
they could abandon the threat of “snapping back” sanctions if Iran fails to
comply with its part of the bargain.
“The problem is, in reality the U.S. cannot disarm itself of one of the
most powerful tools it has in its toolbox of statecraft,” Mr. Vaez said.
And while the talks drag on, the
administration is confronting another reality: For the first time in years,
international inspectors have very little idea of what is happening in the
underground Natanz plant.
The inspection teams have been barred from
many facilities they once regularly visited, measuring enrichment levels and
accounting for every gram of material produced. An agreement to keep cameras
and sensors running lapsed in June.
The Iranians suggest access to the
equipment will be restored when an accord is reached, but there is no guarantee
that inspectors will have access to the back footage.
A month ago, Mr. Blinken said that the
agreement’s lapse was a “serious concern” that “needs to be resolved.”
The Iranians ignored the warning.