Talks should result in complete lifting of sanctions and accusations: nuclear chief

INSUBCONTINENT EXCLUSIVE:
TEHRAN- Mohammad Eslami, the head of the Atomic Energy Organization of Iran (AEOI), stated on Monday that the Vienna negotiations are
intended to dispel any claims regarding Tehran's nuclear activities as well as to permanently abolish the sanctions imposed by the United
States."The premise of the negotiations was to reject charges and eliminate excuses from the adversaries continually publishing bogus news
and documents against Iran," Eslami told reporters while visiting the western province of Lorestan to inaugurate multiple development
the agreement's economic dividends.On Saturday, the AEOI director said efforts to save the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action (JCPOA) should
steer Iran away from the present disruptions and toward economic exchanges, advancement, and economic development.Commenting on the Vienna
talks, he said the Iranian negotiating team "has stood up against the other side and, while retaining the red lines, has made the lifting of
the sanctions its priority."The talks to revive the JCPOA has reached a sensitive stage.On August 8, the European Union presented its draft
nuclear text to put the JCPOA on the right track
Iran responded to the text on August 15
negotiations..
and a response from Iran that I considered reasonable
It was transmitted to the United States which has not yet responded formally," Borrell told a university event in the northern Spanish city
of Santander.The U.S
responded to the text on August 24
Iran is now studying the U.S
response by Friday
Kanaani pointed out.In phone talks with his Omani counterpart on Sunday, Iranian Foreign Minister Hossein Amir Abdollahian said Iran will
inform the EU about its assessment of the U.S
received the U.S
before a comprehensive agreement can be reached.Since April of last year, there have been multiple rounds of talks between Iran, the
remaining members of the JCPOA and the U.S
President Donald Trump unilaterally ditched the JCPOA in May 2018 and reinstated sanctions against the Islamic Republic and added new ones
Even though the Biden administration has frequently admitted that the policy has been a mistake and a failure, the penalties are still in
place.Iranian officials say the ball is now in the U.S
court, and the Biden administration should reassure Tehran that the U.S
won't make the same mistakes that Trump did.