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Tasnim reports that Iran could hold nuclear negotiations with European powers next Week

Tasnim reports that Iran could hold nuclear negotiations with European powers next Week

Iran, Britain France and Germany may hold talks on Tehran's Nuclear Programme next week, according to the semi-official Iranian Tasnim News Agency. This follows warnings from three European countries, that if negotiations are not resumed, international sanctions will be reimposed against Iran.

The principle of the talks is agreed, but the consultations continue on the date and location of the talks. Tasnim quoted a source as saying that the country where the talks may take place next week is not finalized.

The report about possible talks comes just a few days following the first phone call between the E3 nations' foreign ministers and Abbas Araqchi, the Iranian foreign minister, since Israel and the U.S. launched their attack on Iranian nuclear facilities one month ago.

Three European countries along with China, and Russia are the last remaining parties of a nuclear deal signed in 2015 with Iran, from which the United States resigned in 2018. The agreement lifted sanctions against the Middle Eastern nation in exchange for restrictions to its nuclear program.

The E3 has said that they will restore U.N. Sanctions on Tehran by the end August via the "snapback" mechanism if the nuclear talks between Iran and the U.S., which were in progress before the Israel-Iran Air War, do not resume or produce any concrete results.

Araqchi stated earlier this week that "if EU/E3 wants to play a role in the region, they must act responsibly and abandon the tired policies of pressure and threat, including'snap back', for which there is no moral or legal basis."

snapback mechanism

The U.N. Security Council Resolution enshrining this deal expires October 18th.

Oman mediated five rounds of nuclear negotiations between Tehran and Washington prior to the Israel-Iran conflict. However, there were major obstacles, such as Iran's uranium enrichment, which Western powers wanted to reduce to zero in order to minimize any threat of weaponisation.

Tehran insists that its nuclear program is only for civil purposes. (Reporting and editing by Dubai Newsroom)

(source: Reuters)