VIENNA: Talks to save the Iran nuclear deal resumed in Vienna yesterday amid new tensions, with Tehran preparing to ramp up uranium enrichment in response to an attack on a facility it blamed on arch-foe Israel. After a positive first round of negotiations aimed at resurrecting the 2015 agreement scuttled by Donald Trump, Iran's push towards enrichment levels needed for military use "puts pressure on everyone," a European diplomat said.
Tehran says the move is a response to Israel's "nuclear terrorism" after an explosion on Sunday knocked out power at its Natanz enrichment plant. Israel has neither confirmed nor denied involvement but public radio reports in the country said it was a sabotage operation by the Mossad spy agency, citing unnamed intelligence sources. "It definitely complicates things," the diplomat said, ahead of the talks between the remaining members of the deal-Germany, France, the United Kingdom, China, Russia and Iran-resuming at 1230 pm local time (1030 GMT).
But events of the past few days have also "reminded both parties that the status quo is a lose-lose situation", and have "added urgency" to the talks, said Ali Vaez, Iran Project Director at the International Crisis Group think tank. "It is clear that the more the diplomatic process drags on, the higher the risk that it gets derailed by saboteurs and those acting in bad faith," Vaez added.
'Only viable solution'
Known as the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action, the deal has been disintegrating since former US president Donald Trump dramatically withdrew from it in 2018 and re-imposed sanctions, prompting Iran to retaliate by exceeding its agreed limits on nuclear activity. Britain, France and Germany have expressed "grave concern" over the most recent enrichment move, while also rejecting "all escalatory measures by any actor".
China and Russia also strongly back the United States returning to the deal, believing it addresses the most pressing concerns with Iran. Russia's representative in Vienna said the deal remained the "only viable solution which can bring the Iranian nuclear program back to the agreed parameters." But the Joe Biden administration, while agreeing on the JCPOA's value, has stressed that it is waiting for Iran to first roll back steps away from compliance that it took to protest Trump's sanctions.
An American delegation is attending the talks "indirectly", staying at a separate hotel. Washington is "very open-eyed about how this will be a long process," White House press secretary Jen Psaki told reporters Wednesday. "It's happening through indirect discussions, but we still feel that it is a step forward."
'Not much time'
In the meantime, Tehran is reducing its "breakout time"-time to acquire the fissile material necessary for the manufacture of a bomb, said the European diplomat. Under the JCPOA, it had committed to keep enrichment to 3.67 percent, though it stepped this up to 20 percent in January. The UN's International Atomic Energy Agency said its inspectors visited the site at Natanz for "verification and monitoring activities" on Wednesday, and that Iran had "almost completed preparations" to enrich uranium to 60 percent purity. Iran insists its nuclear program is peaceful.
Its foreign minister Mohammad Javad Zarif said the Natanz attack had unleashed a "dangerous spiral" and warned Biden the situation could only be contained by lifting the sanctions Trump imposed. "No alternative. Not much time," he added. "It was unrealistic to expect Iran not to respond to such a humiliating attack at the heart of its nuclear program," the ICG's Vaez said. "But the only thing that in the past two decades has effectively curtailed Iran's nuclear program has been diplomacy, not sanctions or sabotage." - AFP