Western officials have warned Tehran that negotiations to revive its nuclear deal could not continue indefinitely, after the sides announced a break following the election of a new hardline president in Iran.
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Negotiations have been ongoing in Vienna since April to work out how Iran and the United States can both return to compliance with the nuclear pact, which Washington abandoned in 2018 under then-President Donald Trump, and Iran subsequently violated.
Sunday's pause in the talks came after Ebrahim Raisi, a hardliner and fierce critic of the West, won Iran's presidential election on Friday. Two diplomats said they expected a break of around 10 days.
Raisi will take office in early August, replacing pragmatist Hassan Rouhani, under whom Tehran struck the deal agreeing to curbs to its nuclear programme in return for the lifting of international sanctions.
Iranian and Western officials alike say Raisi's rise is unlikely to alter Iran's negotiating position: Iran's hardline Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei already has final say on all major policy.
Still, some Iranian officials have suggested that Tehran could have an interest in pushing through an agreement before the new president takes office in August, to give Raisi a clean slate.
Britain, France and Germany, the European "E3", have effectively been acting as mediators, shuttling between the Iranian delegation and a US team that - Washington having quit the pact - is not a formal participant.
The Western countries say the longer Iran violates the deal and produces banned nuclear material, the harder it becomes to restore the pact.
"As we have stated before, time is on nobody's side. These talks cannot be open ended," E3 diplomats said in a note sent to reporters, adding that the most difficult issues still need to be resolved.
With the talks on pause, attention will now turn to extending a separate accord between Iran and the UN nuclear watchdog IAEA, which expires on June 24. Iran has ended extra monitoring measures that were introduced under the 2015 deal.
EU political director Enrique Mora, who is coordinating the nuclear talks, said he expected an extension that would let data continue to be collected while placing limits on the IAEA's access to it for now.
While the rise of a hardliner to succeed Rouhani was expected, it could play into the hands of the deal's opponents on the right in the United States, and in Israel and Arab countries, who say Iran is not reforming and not trustworthy.
On Sunday Israel's new Prime Minister Naftali Bennett said a Raisi government would be a "regime of brutal hangmen" with which world powers should not negotiate a new nuclear accord.
Raisi, like Khamenei, has supported the nuclear talks as a route to cancelling US sanctions that have wrecked Iran's economy.
Meanwhile, Iran's sole nuclear power plant has undergone a temporary emergency shutdown that will last three to four days, state TV reported.
It is the first time Iran has reported an emergency shutdown of the plant that went online in 2011 with help from Russia.
In March, nuclear official Mahmoud Jafari said the plant could stop working since Iran cannot procure parts and equipment for it from Russia due to banking sanctions imposed by the US in 2018.
Reuters/AP
Australian Associated Press