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    Gulf News Week
    Home»Politics»Middle East»Iran meets European powers amid threats of renewed nuclear sanctions
    Middle East

    Iran meets European powers amid threats of renewed nuclear sanctions

    Gulf News WeekBy Gulf News WeekJuly 25, 2025Updated:July 25, 2025No Comments5 Mins Read
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    Iran meets European powers amid threats of renewed nuclear sanctions
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    The meeting, in Turkiye’s Istanbul, is the first since Israel attacked Iran in mid-June backed by US strikes.

    Iranian diplomats have met their counterparts from Germany, the United Kingdom and France for renewed nuclear talks, amid warnings that the three European powers could trigger “snapback” United Nations sanctions outlined under a previous 2015 deal.

    The meeting, which took place in Turkiye’s Istanbul on Friday and ended at about 1:30pm (10:30 GMT) and reportedly lasted four hours, was the first since Israel’s mid-June attack on Iran, which led to an intensive 12-day conflict, with the United States militarily intervening on Israel’s behalf and attacking key Iranian nuclear sites.

    Israel’s offensive – which killed top commanders, nuclear scientists and hundreds of civilians, as residential areas were struck, as well – also derailed US-Iran nuclear talks that began in April.

    Iran’s Deputy Foreign Minister Kazem Gharibabadi, who attended the talks Friday, alongside senior Iranian diplomat Majid Takht-Ravanchi, said after the meeting that Tehran held a “serious, frank, and detailed” discussion with European powers about sanctions relief and the nuclear issue, in which both sides presented specific ideas.

    He added that Iran reiterated its principled positions, including on the snapback sanctions mechanism, and that it was agreed that consultations on the matter would continue.

    Tehran rejects sanctions

    Foreign Ministry spokesperson Esmaeil Baghaei said in an earlier interview with state news agency IRNA that Iran considers the talk of extending UN Security Council Resolution 2231 to be doubly “meaningless and baseless”.

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    The resolution, which cemented the 2015 deal Iran reached with world powers, under which it curbed enrichment in return for much-needed sanctions relief, is due to expire in October. It enshrines the big powers’ prerogative to restore UN sanctions.

    Since then, the E3 have threatened to trigger the snapback mechanism, which would reinstate the sanctions on Iran by the end of August, under the moribund 2015 nuclear deal which US President Donald Trump unilaterally torpedoed in 2018 during his first term.

    The option to trigger the snapback expires in October, and Tehran has warned of consequences should the E3 opt to activate it.

    International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) head Rafael Grossi said on Friday that Iran has indicated it will be ready to restart technical-level discussions on its nuclear programme with the UN nuclear watchdog.

    Grossi said in Singapore that Iran must be transparent about its facilities and activities. He told reporters that the IAEA had proposed that Iran start discussions on “the modalities as to how to restart or begin (inspections) again”.

    “So this is what we are planning to do, perhaps starting on technical details and, later on, moving on to high-level consultations. So this will not include inspections yet.”

    In late June, with the wounds of the conflict still raw, Iran took an unequivocal stance against the IAEA, with the country’s Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi summarily dismissing Grossi’s request to visit nuclear facilities bombed by Israel and the US. “Grossi’s insistence on visiting the bombed sites under the pretext of safeguards is meaningless and possibly even malign in intent,” Araghchi said at the time.

    Warning from Tehran

    Iranian diplomats have previously warned that Tehran could withdraw from the global nuclear non-proliferation treaty if UN sanctions are reimposed.

    Restoring sanctions would deepen Iran’s international isolation and place further pressure on its already strained economy.

    Israeli Foreign Minister Gideon Saar has urged European powers to trigger the mechanism. Israel’s June 13 attack on Iran came two days before Tehran and Washington were scheduled to meet for a sixth round of nuclear negotiations.

    On June 22, the US struck Iranian nuclear facilities at Fordow, Isfahan, and Natanz.

    Before the conflict, Washington and Tehran were divided over uranium enrichment, which Iran has described as a “non-negotiable” right for civilian purposes, while the US called it a “red line”.

    The IAEA says Iran is enriching uranium to 60 percent purity – far above the 3.67 percent cap under the 2015 deal, but well below the 90 percent needed for weapons-grade levels.

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    Tehran has said it is open to discussing the rate and level of enrichment, but not the right to enrich uranium.

    A year after the US withdrawal from the nuclear deal, Iran reportedly began rolling back its commitments, which had placed restrictions on its nuclear activities in exchange for sanctions relief.

    Israel and Western powers accuse Iran of pursuing nuclear weapons – a charge Tehran has consistently denied. Both US intelligence and the IAEA said they had seen no evidence of Iran pursuing a nuclear weapon in the build-up to the June conflict.

    Enrichment is ‘stopped’

    Iran insists it will not abandon its nuclear programme, which Araghchi called a source of “national pride”.

    The full extent of the damage sustained in the US bombing remains unclear. Trump has claimed the sites were “completely destroyed”, but US media reports have cast doubt over the scale of destruction.

    Araghchi has noted that enrichment is currently “stopped” due to “serious and severe” damage to nuclear sites caused by US and Israeli attacks.

    In an interview with media that aired on Wednesday, Iranian President Masoud Pezeshkian said Iran is prepared for another war and reiterated that its nuclear programme will continue within the framework of international law, adding the country had no intention of pursuing nuclear weapons.

    Israel has warned it may resume attacks if Iran rebuilds facilities or moves towards weapons capability. Iran has pledged a “harsh response” to any future attacks.

    Europe France Germany Iran Israel-Iran conflict Middle East News Nuclear Energy United Kingdom
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