E.U says talks with Iran 'positive enough' to reopen nuclear negotiations

In this photo released by the Iranian Foreign Ministry, Enrique Mora, the European Union coordinator of talks to revive Iran's nuclear accord with world powers, left, shakes hands with Iran's top nuclear negotiator Ali Bagheri Kani, in Tehran, Iran, May 11, 2022
The EU's foreign policy chief said on Friday
that he believed there had been enough progress during consultations between
his envoy and Iranian officials in Tehran this week to relaunch nuclear
negotiations after two months of deadlock.
Talks to revive Iran's 2015 nuclear deal with
world powers have been on hold since March, chiefly over Tehran's insistence
that Washington remove the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps from the U.S. list
of designated terrorist organizations.
Speaking as talks coordinator Enrique Mora
arrived back in Europe, Josep Borrell said Iran's response had been
"positive enough" after Mora had delivered a message that things
could not continue as they were.
"These things cannot be resolved
overnight," Borrell told reporters at a G7 foreign ministers' meeting in
northern Germany. "Let's say the negotiations were blocked and they have
been de-blocked," with the prospect of "reaching a final
agreement."
The broad outline of the deal that aims to
revive the accord which restrains Iran's nuclear program in return for relief
from economic sanctions was essentially agreed in March.
However, it has since been thrown into
disarray after last-minute Russian demands and the dispute over the U.S.
Foreign Terrorist Organization list.
Western officials are largely losing hope
that it can be resurrected, sources familiar with the matter have said, forcing
them to weigh how to limit Iran's atomic program even as Russia's invasion of
Ukraine has divided the big powers.
"It has gone better than expected — the
negotiations were stalled, and now they have been reopened," Borrell said.
A senior EU official sounded a more cautious
tone.
"We still have difficult obstacles on
the way for an agreement," he told reporters, adding that at least Iran
and the U.S. remained engaged.
Iranian Foreign Minister Hossein
Amirabdollahian said Mora’s trip had been "an opportunity to focus on
initiatives to resolve the remaining issues."
"A good and reliable agreement is within
reach if the United States makes a political decision and adheres to its commitments,"
he said.
A French diplomatic source said on Thursday
he saw little chance of the United States agreeing to remove Iran's elite
security force from its list of foreign terrorist organizations any time soon.
Mora has been in Tehran this week in what has
been described as the last chance to salvage the 2015 accord, which then U.S.
President Donald Trump withdrew from in 2018. Britain, China, France, Germany
and Russia are also parties to the accord.
In a bizarre incident, Mora and his team were
held at Frankfurt airport for several hours on return from the Iranian capital
on Friday.
"We were kept separated. Refusal to give
any explanation for what seems a violation of the Vienna Convention," he
said on Twitter.
A German Interior Ministry spokesperson said
German police would make a statement on the incident, telling reporters:
"There can be many reasons that have to do with the flight, the travel
route, and not necessarily with the person."
Iran's official IRNA news agency alleged,
without evidence, that Israel was behind the incident.
"What has happened in Frankfurt has to
do with opposition to the progress in the nuclear talks. ... The Zionist lobby
has influence in the German security apparatus," it said.
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