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Iran’s chief negotiator: Ball in US court over JCPOA

Iran has tabled two draft documents in the highly fraught nuclear negotiations in Vienna demanding all sanctions imposed by former US President Donald Trump be removed.

The move will likely lead to a blame game, as Iran and the United States seek to revive the 2015 nuclear agreement.

The European states attending the talks are expected to request an adjournment, informed sources told MEE, the second time in three days that they have done so.

But the Iranian delegation wants to stay, saying the differences between parties should be hammered out around the table in Vienna.

In his first interview since the talks began on Monday, Bagheri told Middle East Eye that the onus was on the US, not Iran, to come to the table.

Iran feels under no pressure to strike a deal over its nuclear enrichment programme, Bagheri stated, adding that the ball was squarely “in America’s court”.

Bagheri insisted that it was now up to US President Joe Biden to return to full compliance and lift sanctions, as Washington was the one to unilaterally walk away from the treaty in 2018.

Iran has stressed the US was in breach not only of the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action (JCPOA), but also a UN resolution and international law.

However, Bagheri insisted that Iran was deadly serious about the negotiations and highlighted the fact that he has 40 top officials with him in the Austrian capital.

The deputy foreign minister dismissed recent suggestions that Iran was considering an interim deal, the so-called “less for less” plan, or that his country would contemplate a “JCPOA plus”, which would include the start of negotiations about Iran’s ballistic missile force or its regional involvement.

Biden made returning to the JCPOA the centrepiece of his administration’s Middle East policy, but has so far maintained the range of sanctions imposed by Trump to exert “maximum pressure” on Iran.

Talks between Iran and the G4+1 nations of Britain, France, China, Russia and Germany resumed in Vienna this week after a delay of five months, following the election of hardline President Ebrahim Raisi in Iran.

Since Trump’s unilateral withdrawal from the pact designed to curb Iran’s nuclear capabilities and ambitions, Iranian negotiators have refused to meet their US counterparts face to face.

The Iranian and the G4+1 delegations are in the Palais Coburg hotel, with messages sent along Vienna’s empty and draughty streets by EU officials to Americans waiting in the Marriott.

The US is insisting on Iran’s full compliance with the JCPOA, which would involve a reduction in the number of centrifuges and the total stockpile of enriched uranium, in return for the lifting of sanctions that they claim are related to Iran’s nuclear activities.

However, many of the sanctions imposed on Iran by Trump’s “maximum pressure” campaign would remain. Washington states these sanctions are related to missile technology, terrorism, attacks on oil installations in the Persian Gulf, Iranian support for the Houthis in Yemen, and human rights violations.

Iran sees all of these sanctions as directly linked to the nuclear deal and Trump’s attempts to force Tehran to change the agreement.

An Iranian source close to the government said that these non-nuclear related sanctions are a direct violation of the JCPOA because they impede normalisation of Iranian trade and business.

The Iranians want all post-JCPOA sanctions removed, along with those agreed within the original pact.

The talks in Vienna have got off to a rocky start.

MEE understands that splits have emerged in the international team involved in face-to-face talks with the Iranian delegation.

When representatives of a European country lambasted Iran, accusing it of intransigence, the head of the Chinese delegation highlighted western hypocrisy over nuclear proliferation, pointing to the AUKUS defence deal signed between the US, the UK and Australia in September.

The representative of the EU country then backed down when the Iranians told them not to threaten them. He then noted his opening remarks had been misinterpreted, a source familiar with the US position told MEE.

A spokesman for the EU at the talks did not respond to a request for comment.

The European side then requested an adjournment and the Iranian delegation dissented, claiming they would all have to return to Tehran. The talks then continued.

Since June, US officials have repeatedly warned that the window of opportunity for an agreement was closing. Bagheri dismissed this, making it clear that Iran felt no pressure.

“The issue of the negotiations now is not related to Iran. It is related to the United States,” he said, arguing that US violation of the JCPOA, UN Security Council Resolution 2231 and international law put the onus on Washington.

“Therefore, now the ball is in the court of the Americans. The Americans must remove the sanctions,” he added.

Rejecting claims that Iran had agreed to use a framework deal hammered out by the outgoing reformist-led Iranian administration in June as the basis for resumed talks, Bagheri said he was not aware of any interim deal that had been tabled by the Americans.

The chief negotiator added the draft drawn up after the previous six sessions, which is said to have contained such elements, was “full of brackets” and not an agreement.

He made clear Iran was not prepared to talk to the US about Iran’s regional involvement. He stated he was in “constant touch” with Iran’s neighbours and had himself gone to the UAE and Kuwait before arriving in Vienna. MEE learned the talks in the UAE were very successful.

Bagheri told MEE it was “crystal clear” Iran would not negotiate on its missile force.

“And as for our defensive capabilities, our benchmark is to secure and guarantee our national security, and it is crystal clear that no one is going to negotiate over their national security,” he said.

Bagheri, a noted former critic of the JCPOA who once called it “a sick child”, did say that he was prepared to negotiate the reinstatement of the agreement in good faith.

“I truly believe that this is a good opportunity for someone who is very familiar with various angles of the deal to defend the right and restore the right of the Iranian nation,” he added.

He stated there were two issues with the JCPOA: the letter of the law and the behaviour of those parties who had signed up to it. Neither the US, before it left the deal, nor the Europeans who remained, have properly lifted sanctions or traded with Iran.

“We also believe that the implementation of the JCPOA has not been precisely followed during the past several years,” the Iranian negotiator continued.

“The Americans, when they were in the JCPOA and had not yet withdrawn even at that time, they were not implementing the JCPOA comprehensively. So is the case with the Europeans that did not withdraw from the JCPOA, but in practice they failed to fully comply with the deal,” he added.

Iranian officials in Vienna say a major problem with the deal their previous administration signed was the lack of financial verification.

An Iranian source said that while former US President Barack Obama had agreed to the deal, the US Treasury threatened financial institutions and other business entities not to cooperate with Iran.

Bagheri’s 40-person-strong delegation includes two other deputy foreign ministers and a former governor of the Iranian central bank. This team is designed to “verify” whether any commitment to lift sanctions could be independently guaranteed by Iran.

In the run up to the talks in Vienna, Iran’s nuclear facilities have been repeatedly hit by attacks or acts of sabotage, which Tehran has accused Israel and the US of launching.

Iran’s main nuclear facilities at Natanz were hit in April for the second time in a year, and in June an explosion occurred at a site where uranium enrichment centrifuges were being manufactured.

Former government spokesman Ali Rabiei noted at the time the attack on Karaj was largely unsuccessful and claimed the damage to equipment was “insignificant”, but satellite images showed a section of the roof had been blown off, with signs of a fire.

Since then, Iran has refused to allow the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) inspectors back into Karaj to reinstall cameras damaged in the explosion, claiming that footage obtained was used to prepare the attack, a claim vigorously denied by the IAEA.

These attacks have allowed Iran to “build back better”, in the words of US officials who complained to Israel that while tactically satisfying, the operations had only allowed Iran’s capacity to enrich uranium to grow.

The IAEA said in its latest report that Iran had installed 170 IR-6 centrifuges at its Fordow uranium enrichment facility, and The Wall Street Journal noted that the production line at Faraj was back in operation.

According to the most recent IAEA report, Iran’s stockpiles of uranium enriched to 20 percent have fluctuated, but stockpiles of uranium enriched to 60 percent have grown.

IRGC commander advises US to get out of areas adjacent to Iran

“We tell Americans that you still have time to leave the geography around us in humiliation, otherwise you will be expelled from all this geography worse than what you experienced in Afghanistan,” Gha’ani said that during a ceremony held to commemorate the martyrdom of one of IRGC commanders in Fars Province in southwest Iran on Thursday.

The Iranian commander also told the Americans “You cannot do what you used to do in the past any longer.”

“The hit and run tactic no longer works,” he added.

General Gha’ani also noted that the Americans fought in Afghanistan for twenty years while they achieved nothing.

He further described the US failure in Afghanistan as its worst experience.

“The Americans used to start a war in the world and made a profit by selling weapons, but they came to Afghanistan and Iraq uninvited, however after 20 years, they negotiated while they did not get anything in return, although they also committed treason in the negotiations and created the current issues for the people of Afghanistan today,” he further pointed out.

The IRGC Quds Force commander further stated that the US sanctions and threats do not work against the Iranian nations at all.

IRGC cmdr.: Iran defeated many plots during past 43 years

Salami made the comment in a speech to the people of Ilam province in western Iran on Thursday. He added evils have always tried to turn nations into slaves, to impoverish them and to destroy their spiritual life and cultural identity, and this arrogant tradition will continue.

Salami also praised the role of the people of Ilam during the war, saying they shone in the war and gave a dignified life to the history of Iran.

Salami noted that the arrogant powers hatched very dangerous plots against the Iranian nation during the 43 years after the victory of the Islamic Revolution to defeat Iranians.

He added that the United States and its allies have not given up trying to rob the Iranian people of their dignity.

Salami however said Iran maintained and promoted its independence and territorial integrity despite all the conspiracies.

He said Iran is now so powerful that the enemies have removed their military option against the country off the table.

Iran president orders authorities to immediately provide medicine for SMA patients

In a meeting with a group of SMA patients’ families on Thursday, the president listened to the concerns of the patients’ families and the report of the minister of health and relevant officials on the methods of providing necessary medicine for people with special diseases.

The president said drugs needed by SMA patients must be prepared as soon as possible for a medium and long term period.

SMA patients and their families had been gathering outside the parliament for several days this week, demanding authorities import medicine as soon as possible to address a serious shortage in the country.

Spinal muscular atrophy is a genetic disease. It affects the central nervous system, peripheral nervous system, and muscle movement making the patients unable to walk, eat, or breathe.

President Raisi made an unannounced visit to a few SMA families outside the parliament on Wednesday, who were protesting lack of SMA medicine.

The unilateral sanctions imposed by the United States against Iran over the past years have seriously hampered the country’s efforts to import much-needed medical supplies.

Russia denies Vienna talks at impasse

The Russian Foreign Ministry issued a statement, saying the common goal of the Vienna negotiators is reviving the UN Security Council. It said those who claim the talks have stalled are wrong.

The Russian Foreign Ministry added that all the negotiating parties pursue one goal, and that is the swift return of the nuclear agreement to the agreed framework without any annexation or exemption.

Moscow noted that the negotiators aim to ensure the continued implementation of the Iran nuclear deal, known as the JCPOA.

“What is important is that the ongoing negotiations build on the results of the previous six rounds, which happened from April to June 2021, and Russia has made great efforts to achieve this,” the Russian Foreign Ministry said. The statement from the Russian Foreign Ministry comes as on Wednesday the US news outlet Politico quoted negotiators as estimating that roughly 70 to 80 percent of the agreement was complete, with the remaining 20 to 30 percent containing the most difficult questions, such as what to do about Iran’s many advanced centrifuges.

On the other hand, in recent days and weeks, the Zionist regime has made every effort to bring the nuclear talks to a standstill, even claiming during the Vienna talks that Iran is enriching uranium to 90%, while Rafael Grossi, Director General of the International Atomic Energy Agency, has said there is currently no 90% enrichment in Iran.

Family stranded after Afghan evacuation launches legal action against UK

The man, a joint British-Afghan citizen, received an email from the Foreign Office on 23 August telling him to travel with his family to an evacuation centre where he would be “put on the next available flight”.

They followed the instructions and queued outside the Baron Hotel every day, but were not evacuated, and fled after a deadly bombing struck a nearby entrance to Kabul Airport.

Legal documents seen by The Independent say the family are now trapped in Afghanistan and living in hiding, and that “their lives are at real and immediate risk”.

An application lodged at the Administrative Court is seeking a judicial review of the government’s Afghan evacuation policy, alleging that it was not fair or reasonable, and that ministers then failed to take proper steps to assist those left behind.

Nina Kamp, of law firm Duncan Lewis which is representing the family, said: “Our clients were, through no fault of their own, left behind in August.

“They live in fear of the Taliban on account of their association with the UK. Now, the Home Office has made it impossible for them to apply for leave from Afghanistan, and even if they do make it to the UK, they will not be given the ‘warm welcome’ received by people who were evacuated in August, who all automatically received indefinite leave to remain,” Kamp continued, adding, “Instead, they will have to meet all the requirements of the immigration rules which may well be impossible for them.”

The case claims that anyone stranded now faces unreasonable hurdles and costs for reaching the UK safely, which were waived for their evacuated counterparts.

They have to pay fees for entry clearance applications, which are £1,523 per dependent child and partner, and lawyers say it is impossible to comply with requirements because there is no visa application centre in Afghanistan and necessary biometric information cannot be taken in the country.

Other requirements include an English language test, and certain levels of income or savings.

The legal challenge claims the policy “unlawfully discriminates” between people who were called forward by the British government for evacuation, but did not get a seat on a plane, and those who did.

It warns that the family, and others like them, will have no choice but to make dangerous irregular journeys towards Britain if their situation does not change.

If the challenge succeeds, it could affect the treatment of all British nationals and dependents of who are currently unable to escape Afghanistan.

The case has been lodged against the Home Office, Foreign Office (FCDO) and Ministry of Defence (MOD), because the departments were each responsible for different aspects of the policy.

Lawyers representing the family are awaiting a response to the claim, and the Administrative Court will then decide whether to grant permission for a full judicial review.

The government has pledged to offer up to 20,000 Afghans sanctuary in the UK through a new resettlement scheme, but it has not yet started more than three months after the Taliban takeover.

Trade activity resumes at Iran-Afghanistan border crossing

Seyed Ruhollah Latifi added that since yesterday evening, when there was a brief clash around the Malik border, and due to the issues related to the security of the area and precautionary measures adopted, the border activity was stopped, but on Thursday morning all things returned to normal.

He said Malik Customs in Sistan and Baluchestan is the joint trade border between Iran and Afghanistan.
The security deputy of Sistan and Balouchestan’s governor said on Wednesday that the Taliban began shooting at Iranian farmers along the border because they thought the Iranians had trespassed into the Afghan territory.
Mohammad Hadi Marashi also said the distance from the border wall to the zero point border is a space that is agricultural land and available to people and that the farmers were hit there.
The security deputy of Sistan and Balouchestan’s governor said when the Taliban shot at the farmers, Iranian forces returned fire, but soon calm was restored to the area. No casualties were reported following the brief clash.

Chief Iranian negotiator: Ball’s in US’s court

Ali Bagheri Kani

Bagheir added that Iran has held multiple meetings with other signatories to the JCPOA both bilateral and multilateral meetings.

He noted that he held talks with Chinese and Russian delegations and the European troika, pushing for the removal of sanctions during the talks.

The top Iranian negotiator said Tehran gave the other parties to the talks two drafts regarding Iran’s position on the removal of sanctions and Iran’s nuclear actions. Bagheri said the other sides should first study these two drafts and then start serious talks with Iran. He also rejected a claim by some players outside the talks that Iran is not serious about the negotiations.

By external players, Bagheri apparently meant the Israeli regime. He added those players are also trying to hamper the Vienna negotiations.

The Iranian deputy foreign minister said he conveyed this concern to other parties during the talks in Vienna. Bagheri noted that the previous Iranian administration and the 4+1 group drew up a draft during their last round of talks, but the current administration in Tehran made some changes to the wording as it thought the draft had some shortcomings.

He added that Iran wants the 4+1 group – Russia, China, Britain, France and Germany- to carefully study the drafts and make their own proposals.

No new Covid-19 fatalities in 10 Iranian provinces

The ministry’s latest figures released on Thursday also showed that over 106, 620,000 doses of Covid-19 vaccine have been administered in Iran with more than 47,600,000 people fully vaccinated.

The ministry also reported that 76 people have died from the respiratory disease over the past 24 hours, the lowest over the past few months.

According to official figures, nearly 130,000 Iranians have lost their lives to the virus since its outbreak began in the country in 2020.

Over the past weeks Iran has been reporting a downward trend in the number of fatalities and new infection cases.

Health officials are mostly attributing the decreasing numbers to an intensified vaccination campaign during the past months.

Iran, which has been hit by five waves of the disease, has imported tens of millions of vaccine doses and is domestically manufacturing several types of Covid-19 shots to contain the outbreak.

US begging Tehran for talks: UK media

In an article, the Arabic-language version of the newspaper underlined that Iran has reopened the path to nuclear talks in Vienna that it had blocked a few months ago.

By halting the negotiations due to the domestic election where a new president took office and a new negotiating team was formed, wrote the paper, Iran got on the nerves of the US, Europe and the Middle East.

Meanwhile, the Independent added, Iran is, in an organized manner, pressing ahead with its programs such the enrichment of uranium up to a 60-percent purity level and limiting inspections by the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) along with the development of ballistic missiles and increasing its regional influence.

Now that Iran has returned to the Vienna talks, the newspaper said, it will try to obtain more winning cards across the region as negotiations begin.

Under such circumstances, the Independent further wrote, Washington behaves as if it is begging Tehran for returning to indirect talks and keeps insisting on a diplomatic solution.

As the newspaper explained, the reason is that key statesmen in the Biden administration were second-grade politicians in the Obama administration and were on board with Obama and John Kerry all along the path they treaded to talks with Tehran.
As a result, added the paper, they have remained tight-lipped in the face of Tehran’s actions in the region which run counter to the interests of the United States and its regional allies, so that no problems will emerge on the path to reaching a deal.