By Arshad Mohammed, John Irish and Parisa Hafezi
WASHINGTON/PARIS/DUBAI, May 2 (Reuters) – Western officials have largely lost hope the Iran nuclear deal can be resurrected, sources familiar with the matter said, forcing them to weigh how to limit Iran‘s atomic program even as Russia’s invasion of Ukraine has divided the big powers.
While they have not completely given up on the pact, under which Iran restrained its nuclear program in return for relief from economic sanctions, there is a growing belief it may be beyond salvation.
“They are not yanking the IV out of the patient’s arm … but I sense little expectation that there is a positive way forward,” said one source, who like others quoted spoke on condition of anonymity because of the issue’s sensitivity.
Four Western diplomats echoed the sentiment that the deal – which Iran struck with Britain, China, France, Germany, Russia and the United States in 2015 but which then-U.S. President Donald Trump abandoned in 2018 – is withering away.
The pact appeared on the brink of revival in early March when the European Union, which coordinates the talks, invited ministers to Vienna to seal the deal. But talks were thrown into disarray over last-minute Russian demands and whether Washington might remove the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) from its Foreign Terrorist Organization (FTO) list.
The IRGC controls elite armed and intelligence forces that Washington accuses of a global terrorist campaign.
[aesop_image img=”https://kayhanlife.com/wp-content/uploads/2021/12/2021-11-04T000000Z_171326315_MT1NURPHO000QSOFV3_RTRMADP_3_IRAN-ANNIVERSARY-scaled.jpg” panorama=”off” credit=”REUTERS./ ” align=”center” lightbox=”on” captionsrc=”custom” caption=”Iranian schoolboys hold RPG-7 rocket-launcher and a UZI-gun while standing in front of an effigy of the Iranian former commander of the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps’ (IRGC) Quds Force, General Qasem Soleimani, during a ceremony to mark the anniversary of the seizure of the U.S. embassy in downtown Tehran, November 4, 2021. ” captionposition=”left” revealfx=”off” overlay_revealfx=”off”]
Tehran’s demand to remove it from the list is opposed by many U.S. lawmakers, who see it as a terrorist entity despite Iranian denials.
The Russian demands appear to have been finessed but the IRGC designation has not, with the impending Nov. 8 U.S. mid-term elections making it hard for U.S. President Joe Biden to buck domestic opposition to remove it. Read full story
NOBODY WANTS TO SAY ‘ENOUGH IS ENOUGH’
Biden’s aides have made clear they have no plans to drop the IRGC from the list but have not ruled it out, saying if Tehran wants Washington to take a such step beyond strict revival of the deal, named the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action (JCPOA) then Iran must address U.S. concerns outside the deal.
“If they’re not prepared to drop extraneous demands, continue to insist on lifting the FTO, and refuse to address our concerns that go beyond the JCPOA then, yes, we’re going to reach an impasse that is probably not going to be surmountable,” said a senior U.S. official.
“Is it dead? We don’t know yet and frankly we don’t think Iran knows either,” the official said.
So far, Iran seems unwilling to budge on the FTO removal.
“That is our redline and we will not cave on that,” said an Iranian security official.
Neither side wants to admit nearly a year of indirect talks may have failed, several sources said, with Washington hoping Iran might drop its IRGC demand and Iran convinced it can revive the deal whenever it wants.
As a result, events may drift, with the world focused on the Russian invasion of Ukraine and the resulting oil price spike allowing Iran to earn more from its illicit oil exports that evade U.S. sanctions.
“I don’t think anybody wants to say enough is enough,” said a Western diplomat. “Does this go on indefinitely with neither side conceding that it’s over? … Probably.”
This could allow Iran to keep expanding its nuclear program, which it accelerated after Trump abandoned the deal. Washington believes Iran is within weeks of obtaining fissile material for one nuclear weapon if it chose.
Iran has long rejected seeking nuclear weapons.
White House Worried Iran Could Develop Nuclear Weapon in Weeks
NO REAL ‘PLAN B’
Despite talk of a U.S. “Plan B” to address Iran‘s nuclear program if the deal cannot be revived, there are few good options. Read full story
Short of U.S. or Israeli military action to destroy Iranian nuclear sites, the main lever big powers have is to cut Iran‘s oil exports.
While Washington won the tacit support of Moscow and Beijing to curb Iranian exports via U.S. sanctions in the years before the 2015 deal, there is no such consensus among the big powers.
Russia’s invasion of Ukraine despite U.S. and European warnings show Moscow’s assent cannot be taken for granted.
China is the chief buyer of illicit Iranian oil and the sources said getting it to cut back will be tough when oil supplies are tight and Beijing gets discounted pricing from Tehran.
Asked previously about its purchase of Iranian oil in violation of U.S. sanctions, China’s foreign ministry has declined to go into details but has reiterated Beijing’s opposition to U.S. extraterritorial sanctions and urged the United States to remove its unilateral sanctions. Read full story
Iranian oil exports rose in the first quarter to an average of 870,000 barrels per day, according to Kpler, which tracks oil flows, up from 668,000 bpd in the fourth quarter.
The United States would, in effect, have to manage one effort to cut Russia’s oil exports and another to slash Iran‘s.
“Can you galvanize two sanctions coalitions at once? That’s tricky,” said another source, saying Iran is now selling about half the volume of oil that it could sell if U.S. sanctions were removed but, because of the price rise, pocketing the same revenue.
“(Why should Tehran) make a painful concession when they’re basically already getting that oil benefit?” he said.
ANALYSIS: What A New Nuclear Deal Would Mean for Iran and the West
(Reporting By Arshad Mohammed, John Irish and Parisa Hafezi; Additional reporting by Alex Lawler in London; Writing by Arshad Mohammed; Editing by Mary Milliken and Daniel Wallis)