Iran playing a waiting game on its nuclear file
Major countries are waiting eagerly for the 2015 nuclear deal with Iran to be revived through the resumption of talks with Tehran.
Nonetheless, the Iranian Atomic
Energy Agency continues to work diligently to enrich uranium to levels that can
allow Iran to produce nuclear weapons.
In doing this, Tehran is crossing
redlines drawn by western powers. These countries are reacting by imposing
renewed sanctions on Iran, but the Islamic Republic has succeeded in surviving
successive sanctions regimes over the decades.
Broken negotiations
Since June 2021 and all through the
last period of the rule of former Iranian President Hassan Rouhani, the
negotiations that began in April between Iran and the 5+1 group, have been
disrupted in the Austrian capital Vienna.
The negotiations aimed to revive the
nuclear agreement between Iran and western countries.
Former US President Donald Trump
withdrew from the agreement in 2018. Trump viewed the agreement as far from
enough to stop the Iranian threat to world security. The former US president
also viewed the agreement as spanning a short period of time, 15 years only.
Postponed diplomatic plan
Washington has been trying to return
to the agreement since the coming to power in the US by President Joe Biden.
Negotiations over the nuclear deal
made some progress. However, they have been staling since the election to the
presidency in Iran of Ebrahim Raisi on August 3.
Raisi pledged during his
inauguration to support any diplomatic plan that would lead to the lifting of
economic sanctions on his country.
The negotiations were halted under
the pretext that the new administration in Iran was busy putting the Iranian
house in order, even as American negotiators were preparing for them.