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US lawmakers voice doubts about Biden reaching a deal with Iran

Tie, Accessories, Accessory Thomson Reuters/POOL
US President Joe Biden is trying to revive the Iran nuclear deal

The United States said on Wednesday it was ready to tighten sanctions and act with Israel and others to counter the Iranian threat if shaky efforts to revive the 2015 Iran nuclear deal fail, but lawmakers voiced doubts about both options.

“We do not have a deal … and prospects for reaching one are, at best, tenuous,” US Special Envoy for Iran Rob Malley told the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, alluding to indirect U.S.-Iran talks in Vienna that unraveled in March.

Malley’s comments drew fire from senior Democratic and Republican senators, who criticised a possible resurrection of the deal and expressed frustration that they do not know what Democratic President Joe Biden’s “Plan B” will be if talks fail.

Under the agreement, called the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action (JCPOA) and struck by Iran and six major powers in 2015, Tehran limited its nuclear program to make it harder for it to get a bomb in exchange for relief from economic sanctions.

Tehran has long said its program is for peaceful purposes.

Republican then-US President Donald Trump reneged on the accord in 2018 and reimposed harsh US sanctions, prompting Iran to begin violating the nuclear limits about a year later.

Lawmakers zeroed in on past US statements that the time to revive the pact had all but passed – in February and March the State Department suggested it was only a matter of days – prompting an expression of contrition from Malley.

“When are you going to end (the talks)? When are you going to walk?” said Senator Jim Risch, the panel’s senior Republican.

“I apologise. It’s true that we have said things in the past,” Malley said. “What has always been our guiding star is what are the nonproliferation benefits that our experts tell us and the intelligence community tells us.”

Diplomatic and other sources say the US stance has shifted from earlier this year, when it signaled the nonproliferation benefits would soon cease to justify a return, to a view that some limits on Iran’s program are better than none.

While saying that “all options are on the table” – code for the possibility of military action – Malley said a strike on Iran’s nuclear program would only slow it down, not stop it.

He also blamed the current predicament on Trump’s decision to abandon the deal, a stance Senate Foreign Relations Committee Chairman Bob Menendez, a Democrat, rebuffed.

“Lamenting the past … is not a strategy to move towards the future,” Menendez said.

The senator, who opposed the original agreement, said he did not understand why the Biden administration was still willing to negotiate nor what it would do if talks fail.

“Why is it that we are still keeping the door open?” Menendez said. “What is your Plan B?”

Malley said the United States is working with Israel and European partners to try to deter and respond to any Iranian actions, including attacks on US partners as well as its ballistic missile and drone programs.

He declined to say whether Washington might support censuring Iran at June’s International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) board of governors meeting, a step the UN nuclear watchdog has repeatedly avoided.

But Malley said he was confident that whatever happened with the nuclear talks, European allies would work with Washington on sanctions enforcement, at the IAEA or to strengthen Gulf Arab allies to counter Iran.