Iran has dampened hopes of an early agreement in its nuclear dispute with the United States.
“We have come closer, but we are still far from an agreement,” Deputy Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi said on Thursday, according to Iranian media.
He did not want to confirm speculation that the nuclear negotiations in Vienna would enter the final round next week.
Before that, Araghchi said, the US and other parties would have to make “some difficult decisions.
“Iran’s final decision would also definitely not be made in Vienna, but in Tehran, the deputy minister and head of Iran’s delegation in Vienna said.
- Manchester United players earning half a million more than Manchester City rivals
- EU could send training mission to Mozambique, top diplomat says
A new problem in the Vienna negotiations is the imminent change of political power in Iran.
The top favourite in the presidential election in a fortnight is the arch-conservative cleric Ebrahim Raisi, who had always sharply criticized the 2015 Vienna nuclear agreement.
Whether he will continue President Hassan Rowhani’s moderate course is questionable, according to observers.
It is also unclear at present who will soon be appointed as chief nuclear negotiator and lead the negotiations on behalf of Iran.
According to European diplomats, the negotiations to save the nuclear agreement with Iran are heading for the most delicate phase.
Representatives from Germany, France and Britain have been trying since April, together with Russia and China, to mediate between Iran and the United States.
At stake are the difficult questions which of the many Iran sanctions Washington is willing to lift and how to permanently prevent Iranian nuclear facilities from being used for military purposes.
Under the leadership of the previous president Donald Trump, Washington had unilaterally left the nuclear pact in 2018 and again imposed economically painful sanctions on Tehran.
The Islamic Republic then gradually expanded its nuclear activities in contravention of the agreements and restricted international nuclear inspections.
Most recently, Iran began producing uranium that is just below the purity level suitable for nuclear weapons.