Berlin: Diplomats negotiating in Vienna to revive Iran’s 2015 nuclear deal with world powers have paused after five days of talks to consult with their governments and will reconvene next week, officials said Friday.
We have identified the challenges ahead. Now it is time to consult with capitals, EU diplomat Enrique Mora told reporters. We will be resuming here in Vienna next week.
We have substantial challenges ahead, time is not unlimited, there is an obvious sense of urgency, he added. But above all we need a certain convergence of policy to start negotiations.
The so-called Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action, or JCPOA, has effectively been on life support since the United States pulled out under then-President Donald Trump’s maximum pressure campaign against Tehran in 2018.
The remaining signatories to the nuclear deal Iran, Russia, China, France, Germany and Britain have been meeting at the Palais Coburg, a luxury hotel where the agreement was signed six years ago.
A U.S. delegation headed by the Biden administration’s special envoy for Iran, Robert Malley, was staying at a nearby hotel and being briefed on the talks by diplomats from the other countries.
Mora said reviving the agreement would require Iran to meet its commitments under the accord, and bringing the United States back into full compliance,” meaning Washington would need to drop the crippling economic sanctions it imposed on Tehran.
Asked what had been achieved this week, Mora said there had been progress in the sense that we have had a new Iranian delegation, they have engaged in negotiations with other delegations.
We are incorporating also new policy sensitivities for the new Iranian delegations,” he said. “But again, the point of departure, the common ground is where we finished on the 20th of June.