Iran says ‘progress’ made at nuclear meeting, but ‘still not enough’

Published June 29, 2019
Vienna: Abbas Araghchi (right), an official at Iran’s ministry of foreign affairs, and Helga Schmid, Secretary General of the European Union’s external affairs department, take part in a meeting  to discuss the 2015 nuclear deal between the West and Tehran.The meeting was also attended by representatives from China, France, Germany, Russia and the United Kingdom.—AFP
Vienna: Abbas Araghchi (right), an official at Iran’s ministry of foreign affairs, and Helga Schmid, Secretary General of the European Union’s external affairs department, take part in a meeting to discuss the 2015 nuclear deal between the West and Tehran.The meeting was also attended by representatives from China, France, Germany, Russia and the United Kingdom.—AFP

VIENNA: Iran said progress was made on Friday at a Vienna meeting on its nuclear accord with world powers but “still not enough” as the landmark 2015 accord teetered on the brink amid tension in the Gulf.

Speaking after talks with European, Russian and Chinese officials in the Austrian capital, Iran’s Deputy Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi said what had been agreed was “one step forward” but “still not meeting Iran’s expectations”.

Iran is on the verge of exceeding a limit on stockpiles of nuclear material foreseen under the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action (JCPOA).

Iran says it no longer feels bound by certain limits in the deal due to crippling sanctions re-imposed by the United States after Washington unilaterally pulled out of the accord in May 2018.

Under the deal signed in 2015, Iran pledged to reduce its nuclear capacities for several years and to allow international inspectors into the country to monitor its activities in return for relief from international sanctions.

Iran had said it would exceed the agreed 300-kilogramme (660-pound) reserve of enriched uranium on Thursday, but an Iranian official said the latest figures showed the stockpile was still 2.8kg under the ceiling.

Speaking after Friday’s meeting, Araghchi said: “The decision to reduce our commitments has already been made in Iran and we continue on that process unless our expectations are met.” “I don’t think that the progress we made today would be considered enough to stop our process but the decision is not mine,” he added, rather up to his superiors in Tehran.

Araghchi said another meeting of the parties to the JCPOA would be convened at ministerial level “very soon”, possibly in the next few weeks.

As well as the stockpile limit, Iran has said that it will start enriching uranium above the agreed purification level of 3.67 percent from July 7. Weapons-grade levels are about 90 percent.

An Iranian official stressed Thursday that even if both limits are surpassed, this could be reversed “within half an hour” if there were progress on boosting Iran’s oil exports despite US sanctions, a key Iranian demand.

Helga Schmid, the deputy to the EU’s foreign policy chief, also took part in Friday’s meeting and said in a tweet there had been “constructive discussions”.

She said INSTEX, a mechanism set up to facilitate trade with Iran and avoid US sanctions, was “now operational, first transactions being processed and more EU Members States to join”.

Araghchi welcomed progress on INSTEX but underlined the importance to Iran of reviving its oil exports, saying that “for INSTEX to be useful for Iran, Europeans need to buy oil from Iran or to consider credit lines for this mechanism”.

Also speaking after Friday’s meeting, a Chinese foreign ministry official said his country would continue to import Iranian oil in defiance of US attempts to stop them entirely.

“We do not accept this so-called zero policy of the United States,” said Fu Cong, director general of the Chinese foreign ministry’s department of arms control.

Fu’s statement came a day before US President Donald Trump — a vehement opponent of the JCPOA — is to meet his Chinese counterpart Xi Jinping on the sidelines of a G20 summit in Japan in an attempt to resolve an escalating trade war.

Published in Dawn, June 29th, 2019

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