Tehran: Iran said Monday was the time for the United States to take political decisions to resolve the remaining main issues, including in lifting sanctions, in talks aimed at reviving the Tehran nuclear agreement.
“What’s left is an important and important problem that requires specific political decisions,” said Foreign Ministry spokesman Saeed Khatibzadeh at his stopover conference.
“Washington, in particular, must announce his decision to eliminate sanctions and the remaining problems,” he said.
“If this happens …
we will reach an eternal and reliable agreement at a good speed.” His statement came on the day of the head of the negotiator would return to Vienna for the conversation after traveling home on Saturday for consultation.
The discussion continued over the weekend at the experts level.
The encouragement to save the 2015 nuclear agreement was continued at the end of November, after the talks were suspended in June when Iran chose the Ultrakonvative President of the Ebrahim Relision.
The 2015 agreement – agreed upon by Iran, USA, China, Russia, England, France and Germany – offered Tehran sanction assistance in exchange for sidewalks on its nuclear program.
But the US unilaterally interested in 2018 under President Donald Trump and ransibkan rigid economic sanctions, encouraging Tehran to start playing back his commitment.
“Negotiations will be in the right direction, we have no encouragement that cannot be processed,” Khatibzadeh said, referred to the consensus of many texts from the new agreement.
Different parties have signaled progress in talks, with Tehran said this was caused by efforts by “all parties”.
But Khatibzadeh criticized delays, “especially by the US”, in proposing initiatives for the removal of sanctions.
The US has participated only indirectly in the conversation, which seeks to bring Washington back to the agreement and ensure Iran returns to its commitment.
The Western party insisted on “urgency” to reach an agreement, with US Secretary Antony Blinken said on Thursday that there were only a few weeks left to save the agreement.
Washington is ready to see “another option” if negotiations fail, he said.
In response, Khatibzadeh warned: “Blinken knows better than everyone that every country has his own plans and plans Iran B may not be as a US interest.”