Uncertain prospects for new round of talks on Iran's nuclear file in Vienna
The world's attention is turning to Austrian capital, Vienna, where the seventh round of talks on Iran's nuclear file will take place on November 29.
The United
States will participate in the talks indirectly.
Washington has expressed sorrow over the lack of progress in talks between Iran
and the International Atomic Energy Agency.
It
said Tehran's position constitutes an ominous sign before the new round of
talks on its nuclear file.
The
US also complained against Iran's continued development of nuclear weapons and its
refusal to cooperate with the Atomic Energy Agency.
Tense tour
Everybody
is hoping that the new round of talks will breathe new life into the nuclear
agreement between Iran and the West.
However,
the atmosphere preceding the new round of negotiations indicates that it may
not make any progress, given the absence of positive indicators from parties to
the negotiations.
The
same parties have already exchanged negative messages that unveil the continued
presence of contentious issues between them.
Each
party also insists to have its demands fulfilled to the full, especially Iran which
puts on the table a set of demands deemed by others as impossible.
Some
people also consider the Iranian position to be elusive.
The
Islamic Republic said it was ready to return to the negotiating table.
Nonetheless, it made the same demands which were rejected by parties to the
talks in the past.
Iranian
Foreign Ministry spokesman, Saeed Khatibzadeh, said his country would focus
on lifting all sanctions imposed on it.
"We
will behave according to the intentions of the other parties," he added at
a recent press briefing.
Khatibzadeh
noted that his country would scrap the nuclear agreement with Western
countries, if the agreement did not achieve its economic and commercial
interests.
His
remarks came to confirm that Iran views the lifting of sanctions as its utmost
priority in talks with Western nations.
The
same demand caused the Americans to be angry in the past, which casts a grim
shadow over the expected results of the new round of talks in Vienna on
November 29.