Europe Is Late but
Crucial in U.S.-Iran Nuclear Talks
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APRIL 08, 2021
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COMMENTARY
Source: Getty
Summary: Despite a slow start, the
EU is working hard to hammer out a renewed nuclear deal between the United
States and Iran. But it won’t be easy.
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Vienna, here we come—again. Six years after world
powers concluded their negotiations on Iran’s nuclear program in the Austrian
capital, diplomats are talking again in the stucco-clad ballrooms of otherwise
mostly deserted five-star hotels. Yet despite the genteel setting, the talks
will be no waltz in the park.
THE EU IS STARTING FROM A WEAKER POSITION THIS TIME
The EU is trying to broker an agreement between the
United States and Iran on each side’s return to the deal. Yet just like in July
2015, success is far from guaranteed. In fact, the Europeans look much weaker
today than then, and that’s not just because of their dismal record in the
ongoing coronavirus pandemic. If anything, the past three years since the
United States left the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action, or JCPOA, have
shown Europe’s inability to keep the deal alive beyond
its vital functions.
It’s true that France, Germany, and the UK—the three
European co-signatories of the deal (the E3)—have fought hard to prevent the
agreement from unravelling, including by torpedoing America’s unilateral efforts to
reinstate all United Nations sanctions on Iran in September 2020. However, they
could not maintain the economic opening that Tehran was promised in return for
strict supervision of its nuclear program. Even after the pandemic had hit the
Islamic Republic especially hard, European governments failed to find a way to increase humanitarian
trade, or indeed grant multilateral aid to Iran, in the face of continuing U.S.
sanctions.
WHY A NEW DEAL WILL BE HARD TO STRIKE
The Europeans are learning the hard way that it is one
thing to rally countries around the world against a bully in the White House
but quite another to devise a plan for two sworn enemies with toxic domestic
politics to find common ground again. In addition, they too have grown wary of an Iranian government that has
methodically dismantled its compliance with the nuclear agreement, while
enlarging its foothold in the wider region and violently cracking down on
popular dissent at home.
In a similar way, U.S. President Joe Biden is
realizing that although he promised to return to the deal on the campaign
trail, it is hard to enact a compliance-for-compliance approach once in
office. The previous administration had painstakingly built a “sanctions wall” against Iran to prevent a successor’s
possible return to the JCPOA. Specifically, it went beyond just reinstating all
nuclear-related sanctions by late 2018 and deliberately repackaged some of them
as measures against Iran’s missile program and regional activities, in order to
make the sanctions’ undoing prohibitively costly in political terms.
All this was clear when Biden won the U.S. vote in
November 2020. Yet the Europeans
missed the chance to prepare the ground for talks, when time
was of essence. Since then, Iran has made significant advances on developing
more capable centrifuges and enriching uranium to 20 percent—far above the
level needed for a civilian nuclear energy program. The time it would take Iran
to amass enough fissile material for one atomic bomb is now estimated to have shrunk
from over a year to a couple of months.
Iran’s political calendar is also constraining the
chances for compromise. Its presidential election is a mere ten weeks away, and
it’s not clear how the coming campaign will influence the diplomatic dynamics.
For sure, the incumbent, President Hassan Rouhani, would like to see his
signature success—the lifting of international sanctions following the 2015
deal—vindicated by a renewed agreement. However, the country’s Supreme Leader,
Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, has raised the bar for any bargain by asking for
assurances that, this time, Washington will live up to its word. In addition, a
hardliner-dominated parliament has issued guidance to drastically reduce
international inspections, a move that has only been put on hold for a three-month window ending in
late May, after the International Atomic Energy Agency scrambled to reach a
temporary agreement.
EUROPE’S DIFFICULT TASKS AHEAD
For Europe, the negotiations that have begun in Vienna
this week are the last chance to save a deal that is essential to its security, as
leaders have repeatedly claimed. Together with the Austrian government hosting
the talks and the E3 representatives shuttling between the Americans and
Iranians in their separate hotels, the EU—as chair of the JCPOA’s joint
commission—is working on two to-do lists. The first is to spell out what Tehran
needs to do to come back into compliance on the nuclear front. The
second—likely much longer one—will set out precisely how Washington needs to
cut back its sanctions architecture. Once this short-term return to the deal is
secured, the parties can engage in the hard slog of curtailing Iran’s reach by setting up a regional
security architecture.
Without
Europe’s mediation efforts, any agreement in such a distrustful atmosphere will
be elusive. Yet it took the Europeans far too long to step up their game and
engage in this eleventh-hour diplomatic dance—in the very city of their lone
foreign policy success of late.
Adebahr is a
nonresident fellow at Carnegie Europe. His research focuses on foreign and
security policy, in particular regarding Iran and the Persian Gulf, on European
and transatlantic affairs, and on citizens’ engagement.
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