Washington:
US President-elect Joe Biden will insist Iran agrees to new demands if it desires the US to return to a nuclear deal and lift sanctions, The New York Times stated Wednesday.
The Times stated the Biden administration would seek to extend the duration of “restrictions on Iran’s production of fissile material that could be used to make a (nuclear) bomb” in a new round of negotiations.
Iran would also have to address its “malign” regional activities via proxies in Lebanon, Iraq, Syria and Yemen in the talks that would have to involve its Arab neighbors like Saudi Arabia, the report stated.
President Donald Trump unilaterally withdrew from the deal in 2018 and has reimposed crippling sanctions on Iran as portion of a “maximum pressure” campaign against the US’s arch enemy.
Biden, who defeated Trump at the ballot box final month, stated throughout campaigning that he intends to supply Iran a “credible path back to diplomacy”.
In the Times interview published on Wednesday, the incoming US president stood by these views, saying: “It’s going to be hard, but yeah.”
“Look, there’s a lot of talk about precision missiles and all range of other things that are destabilizing the region,” Biden was quoted as saying.
But, he added, “the best way to achieve getting some stability in the region” was to deal “with the nuclear program”.
Biden warned that if Iran acquired a bomb, it would spark a nuclear arms race in the Middle East, “and the last goddamn thing we need in that part of the world is a buildup of nuclear capability”.
“In consultation with our allies and partners, we’re going to engage in negotiations and follow-on agreements to tighten and lengthen Iran’s nuclear constraints, as well as address the missile program,” he told the Times.
Biden was cited as saying that the United States constantly had the selection to international snap back sanctions if want be, and that Iran knew that.
The 2015 nuclear deal — identified formally as the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action, or JCPOA — gave Iran relief from sanctions in return for curbs on its nuclear system.
In response to Trump’s withdrawal, the Islamic republic has retaliated by rolling back its commitments to the accord.
Iran’s government has presented a cautious welcome to Biden’s victory, but conservatives have accused it of yielding to what they say is an “illusion” of a transform by the “Great Satan” of America.
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