22 August 2022; MEMO: Iran accused the United States, on Monday, of procrastinating in indirect talks aimed at reinstating Tehran's 2015 nuclear deal, and said a prisoner swap with Washington was not linked to the negotiations, Reuters reports.
After 16 months of fitful, indirect US-Iranian talks, with European Union officials shuttling between the sides, a senior EU official said on 18 August that it had laid down a final offer and expected a response within a "very, very few weeks".
Iran, last week, responded to the EU's text with "additional views and considerations", while calling on Washington to show flexibility to resolve three remaining issues.
The EU's Foreign Policy Chief, Josep Borrell, said on Monday he hoped the United States would respond positively as early as this week to the bloc's proposal. Tehran had given a "reasonable" response to it, he said.
Iran's Foreign Ministry spokesperson, Nasser Kanaani, said Tehran wanted a sustainable deal that would preserve Tehran's legitimate rights.
"The Americans are procrastinating and there is inaction from the European sides … America and Europe need an agreement more than Iran," Kanaani told a news conference.
"Until we agree on all issues, we cannot say that we have reached a complete agreement."
The United States has repeatedly called on Tehran to release several Iranian-Americans held in Iran on security charges. Iran has demanded several Iranians detained on charges linked to US sanctions to be freed.
"We emphasise that the exchange of prisoners with Washington is a separate issue and it has nothing to do with the process of negotiations to revive the 2015 pact," Kanaani said, adding that Tehran was ready to swap prisoners.
In 2018, then-President Donald Trump reneged on the deal reached before he took office, calling it too soft on Iran, and re-imposed harsh U.S. sanctions, prompting Tehran to begin breaching the pact's nuclear curbs.
"We seek a good agreement which would guarantee Iran's national interests and would be long-lasting … We won't be bitten twice," Kanaani said.
The 2015 agreement appeared on the verge of revival in March, after 11 months of indirect talks between Tehran and US President Joe Biden's administration in Vienna.
But talks broke down over obstacles such as Tehran's demand that Washington provide guarantees that no US president would abandon the deal as Trump did.
READ: US makes concessions to Iran in exchange for nuclear deal return
However, Biden cannot provide such ironclad assurances because the deal is a political understanding rather than a legally binding treaty.
In Jerusalem, Israeli Prime Minister Yair Lapid told French President, Emmanuel Macron, in a phone conversation on Monday that Israel objected to a revived agreement and would not be bound by it, should one reached.
"The Prime Minister made clear to the President that Israel opposes a return to the deal and would not be obligated by such an agreement. Israel will continue to do everything to prevent Iran from attaining a nuclear capability," Lapid's office said.
Israel – widely believed to have its own nuclear arsenal – is not a party to the negotiations. But it worries about its arch-enemy and has made veiled threats to take pre-emptive military action if it deems diplomacy to be at a dead end.