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Iran's nuclear saga: from 2015 deal to 'final' draft text Paris, Aug 16 (AFP) Aug 16, 2022 The main developments in talks on Iran's nuclear programme since 2015 after Tehran gives its response to a "final" draft agreement aimed at restoring a landmark deal with world powers.
Rouhani secures support from supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei for efforts to break the deadlock. On July 14, 2015, Iran and the five permanent members of the UN Security Council -- Britain, China, France, Russia and the United States -- plus Germany reach a historic accord in Vienna. The deal places significant restrictions on Iran's nuclear programme in exchange for sanctions relief after 12 years of crisis and 21 months of protracted negotiations. It comes into force on January 16, 2016. Under the accord, Tehran's nuclear programme is placed under strict UN control subject to guarantees it is not trying to make an atom bomb, something Iran has always denied.
"We cannot prevent an Iranian nuclear bomb under the decaying and rotten structure of the current agreement," he says. Deal critics had complained from the start about the time limits applied to the deal. Later in 2018, Washington begins reimposing sanctions on Iran and companies with ties to it, hitting the central bank and the country's vital oil sector. Major international firms halt activities in the country.
Trump hits back by sanctioning Iran's steel and mining sectors. Tehran increases its stockpile of enriched uranium in excess of the limits laid down in the deal. It announces in early 2020 it is foregoing a limit on its number of uranium-enriching centrifuges. In 2021, Iran says it has started enriching uranium to up to 60 percent -- many times the limit of 3.67 percent imposed by the deal -- and closer to weapons-grade.
Iran's new ultraconservative president, Ebrahim Raisi, says in August he is open to negotiations but will not be pressured by sanctions. Talks resume in November.
Around mid-March, the EU says talks are suspended. Days later both Washington and Tehran say a compromise is "close", but differences remain.
Iran responds by removing surveillance cameras at nuclear facilities. On June 16, Washington sanctions a network of Iranian petrochemical firms.
On August 4, negotiators gather for fresh talks. On August 7, Iran demands that the UN nuclear watchdog "completely" resolve outstanding issues related to questions over nuclear material at undeclared sites.
On Tuesday Iran says it has replied to the text, which was delivered late Monday. The US and EU say they are studying Tehran's response. Iran's official IRNA news agency reports that "an agreement will be concluded if the United States reacts with realism and flexibility" to Iran's response.
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