White House says return to Iran nuclear deal ‘highly unlikely’ – media

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A senior US official said nuclear talks with Tehran have all but broken down, Axios reported

White House Middle East coordinator Brett McGurk has said the chances of reviving the 2015 nuclear pact with Iran are “highly unlikely,” according to a recent report, following months of stop-start negotiations and a war of words between Tehran and Washington. 

A top adviser to President Joe Biden, McGurk voiced major doubts about a return to the agreement in recent remarks to think tank experts, Axios reported on Wednesday, citing unnamed sources. He blamed Iran for the impasse, claiming it wants the US to “add something to the pot” and alter the terms of the deal, though did not specify what that might entail.

However, McGurk insisted “we are not going to do that,” stating that Washington would not accept Tehran’s proposal and is willing to use sanctions and “diplomatic isolation” against the country in the meantime.

The adviser suggested Iran is seeking to change details of the agreement – formally known as the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action (JCPOA) – in order to convince skeptics within the government who have urged against any return to the deal.

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Mohammad Eslami, chief of the Atomic Energy Organization of Iran (AEOI), speaking at an event during the 16th 'National Day of Nuclear Technology' in the capital Tehran on April 9, 2022. © HO / Iranian Presidency / AFP
Iran announces new step in nuclear program

Since former US President Donald Trump unilaterally withdrew from the pact in 2018, Tehran has also gradually stepped away from its own commitments, insisting Washington must stick to the deal’s original terms and lift a raft of sanctions imposed on its economy. Iran has continued to boost its enrichment of uranium beyond limits set out under the JCPOA, and most recently declared that it would construct a new nuclear research reactor near the city of Isfahan.

While Biden has repeatedly said he would like to revive the agreement, months of negotiations have yet to show tangible results, with Washington and Tehran engaged in mutual finger-pointing over who is to blame for the lack of progress.

Though Iran has long maintained its nuclear program is for peaceful purposes, the recent ramp-up in its nuclear activities has raised concerns for some in the West.  

In mid-July, a senior adviser to Iranian Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei claimed that the country had the technical capability to produce a nuclear bomb but had not yet made the political decision to do so. Khamenei, however, has previously stated that all weapons of mass destruction are forbidden under Islam – even issuing a religious decree against such arms in 2003 – a position repeatedly reiterated by Tehran over the years, including just earlier this month.


READ MORE: Iran nuclear talks end without progress


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