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JCPOA: Iran Pushes for EU Guarantees, Diplomats Meet in Vienna

JCPOA: Iran Pushes for EU Guarantees, Diplomats Meet in Vienna
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Iran's top nuclear negotiator Abbas Araqchi said Iran will decide soon whether to stay in the 2015 nuclear deal as he urged the Europeans to guarantee Tehran's interests under the accord after the US withdrawal. 

JCPOA: Iran Pushes for EU Guarantees, Diplomats Meet in Vienna

Araqchi arrived in Vienna on Friday to meet his European counterparts to discuss the future of the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action [JCPOA] after US President Donald Trump's dramatic announcement to leave it. 

"We are yet to decide whether we will stay in the JCPOA or leave it and this depends on how the other members can compensate one member's exit," the Fars news agency quoted Araqchi as saying.

"The Europeans must specifically tell us how they can guarantee Iran's interests in the deal in the absence of the US and its re-imposition of sanctions," he added.

Since Trump's May 8 decision to quit the JCPOA, other signatories of the deal -- the UK, France, China, Russia and Germany-- have had a tough task on their hands to preserve it.

"The US is no longer viewed by us and other signatories as a member of the JCPOA and we will see in our Joint Commission meetings how the JCPOA can survive without America," Araqchi said.

He further noted that Iran and the Europeans had already discussed the sanctions and their effects on different sectors, including energy, automotive industry, transportation, aviation, banking and insurance.

Another Iranian official said Iran expects European powers to give it a package of economic measures by the end of the month to compensate Washington's withdrawal.

"We expect the package to be given to us by the end of May," he said, adding, "I'm sorry to say that we haven't seen the Plan B yet. The Plan B has just started to be figured out."

The official said the deal has been put "in intensive care" by Washington's dramatic withdrawal. "We have now a deal which is in the intensive care unit, it's dying." 

Source: News Agencies, Edited by website team

 

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