Tehran is believed to be holding out for two objectives: a guarantee of some protection if the United States again pulls out from the deal, and the removal of Washington's official "Foreign Terrorist Organization" designation of the powerful Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC).
According to report, US optimism
that a deal to restore the 2015 agreement to limit Iran's nuclear developed has
soured, with the State Department warning Tuesday it was headed toward
"Plan B" if Tehran doesn't budge.
Just a week ago Washington
officials were hopeful that an agreement that aimed to halt Iran's march toward
nuclear weapons capability, after almost one year of negotiations, was within
reach.
""We are close to a
possible deal, but we're not there yet," State Department spokesman Ned
Price said on March 16. "We do think the remaining issues can be
bridged."
US officials said they thought
Tehran would reach an agreement after Sunday's celebration of Nowruz, the
Persian New Year.
But that tone suddenly changed the
following day.
"I want to be clear that an
agreement is neither imminent nor is it certain," Price said Monday.
And on Tuesday, while refusing to
say the talks had reached an impasse, Price said the United States had
contingency plans if a deal could not be reached and Iran's alleged plans to
develop nuclear weapons were not halted.
"The onus is on Tehran to make
decisions that it might consider difficult," Price told reporters.
"In fact we are preparing
equally for scenarios with and without a mutual return to full implementation
of the JCPOA," he said, referring to the formal name of the 2015 deal, the
Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action.
The administration of president
Donald Trump unilaterally abrogated the six-party JCPOA in 2018, accusing
Tehran of violating its terms and branding it a weak deal.
Experts said Iran had mostly stuck
to the terms, but months after the US pullout, the Islamic republic began
ramping up its nuclear program with activities that would enhance its ability
to build a nuclear weapon.
Last April, three months after he
took office, President Joe Biden started new negotations to revive the 2015
agreement, promising an easing of punishing sanctions in exchange for restoring
JCPOA controls.
But the talks have proceeded with
the knowledge that Tehran has already moved much closer to nuclear weapons
"breakout," which would render the JCPOA moot.
"We are still working through a number of difficult issues," Price said, while not confirming what the specific unagreed points were.
"We know that there has to be a great deal of urgency, and we know that now the onus is on Tehran to make decisions," he said.
Suggesting that Washington has not
given up, Price did say Monday that it could make concessions.
"I'm appalled at the concessions this administration is considering to placate the Iranian regime," he said, calling on Biden to "walk away" from the talks.
"A deal that provides $90-$130 billion in sanctions relief, relieves sanctions against Iran's worst terror and human rights offenders, and delists the IRGC does not support our national security interests," he said.
But Democrat Chris Murphy said a
deal would be positive.
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