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Iran claims to seek a sustainable nuclear deal after meeting with U.S. ally Qatar

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Reuters

Dubai — Iland Bye Said Wednesday that it called for a strong and lasting nuclear deal with world powers, following a meeting with U.S. ally Qatar on easing deadlocked efforts to revive the 2015 nuclear deal. ..

Qatar's Foreign Minister Sheikh Mohammed bin Abdulrahman Altani was unable to break the deadlock in Doha's indirect EU-mediated talks with Iran that hindered efforts to revive the nuclear deal. I visited Tehran a week later.

"We are determined to seek a good, strong and lasting agreement, and despite the US claim, we have not made any demands other than a nuclear agreement," said Hossein Iran. Foreign Minister Amirabdrahian said at a joint press conference with Sheikh. Mohammed in Tehran.

Since last week, Iran has questioned US determination to save the deal, and Washington said Tehran has added new demands at the Doha parley.

But Iran's Amirabdrahian said on Tuesday that Washington "must decide whether to want a deal or insist on sticking to one-sided demands." ..

Under the 2015 agreement, Iran curtailed uranium enrichment work, a potential route to nuclear weapons, in exchange for relief from economic sanctions. Iran states that it only seeks private nuclear energy.

However, former US President Donald Trump removed the United States from the agreement in 2018, imposed strict economic sanctions, and urged Teheran to break many of the agreement's nuclear restrictions.

After almost a year of indirect negotiations in Vienna, a rough outline of the resurrected transaction was agreed. However, after that, negotiations broke down in March. This was primarily about Tehran's request for Washington to remove the Revolutionary Guard from US terrorists. The United States refused, claiming that this was outside the scope of reviving the agreement.

Other obstacles to the agreement are that Iran and Western diplomats said it would provide a guarantee that Washington would not quit the agreement again, and that the International Atomic Energy Agency would talk about Tehran's nuclear work. Including withdrawing the claim. "The American side should ensure that Iran will fully benefit from the agreement revived in 2015. So far, the American side has not been able to provide such a guarantee." Ami Lovedrahian said. (Written by Parisa Hafezi, edited by William Maclean)