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US negotiator says Iran deal ‘tenuous,’ warns of Plan B

US

US negotiator says Iran deal ‘tenuous,’ warns of Plan B

The US pointman on Iran warned on Wednesday that restoring a nuclear agreement is unlikely and that if Tehran sticks to its objectives, it would face a fresh pressure campaign.

Despite the fact that Rob Malley, who has led more than a year of indirect talks with Iran in Vienna, told Congress that President Joe Biden’s administration still supports the 2015 nuclear deal and is willing to lift sanctions if a deal is reached with Tehran, President Biden’s administration still supports the 2015 nuclear deal.

“We do not have a deal with Iran and prospects for reaching one are, at best, tenuous,” Malley was to tell the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, according to prepared testimony.

“If Iran maintains demands that go beyond the scope of the JCPOA, we will continue to reject them, and there will be no deal,” he said, using the official name for the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action.

He was likely referring to the clerical state’s demands to remove a terrorism blacklisting of the elite Revolutionary Guards, a step rejected by Biden and bitterly opposed by many in Congress.

The JCPOA — brokered under then-president Barack Obama with the blessing of European powers, Russia and China — promised economic relief for Iran which, inspectors said, had been complying with the accord’s severe curbs on its nuclear program.

Obama’s successor Donald Trump withdrew in 2018 and reimposed sweeping unilateral sanctions, vowing to bring Tehran to its knees and leading Iran to step up nuclear work without formally leaving the JCPOA.

If talks with the Biden administration fail, “Iran’s government will need to explain to its people why it has chosen isolation,” Malley said.

“We are fully prepared to live with and confront that reality if that is Iran’s choice, ready to continue to enforce and further tighten our sanctions, albeit this time around with Europe firmly by our side,” Malley said.

The United States would also be ready to “respond strongly to any Iranian escalation, working in concert with Israel and our regional partners,” he said.

Malley, sure to face hostile questioning from lawmakers opposed to diplomacy with Iran, said he was under no illusions about the clerical state and pointed to recent demonstrations over austerity measures.

“The protests we are seeing now in Iran are a measure of the government’s corruption and mismanagement, and the brutal response to those protests are a reminder of the government’s moral bankruptcy,” Malley said.

He did, however, argue that the nuclear deal was better for the US, and that Trump’s “maximum pressure” had clearly failed.

“We will be in a much stronger position to confront them if we restore the constraints on Iran’s nuclear program that today are on the verge of disappearing.”