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ByAnonymous, Anonymous

Analysis

Can Iranians compromise in Istanbul?

November 24, 2016 22:41
Ahmadinejad: deception
2 min read

Until last week, it was not even clear where talks would happen.

On Friday, the five permanent members of the UN Security Council plus Germany (P5+1) will meet their Iranian counterparts in Istanbul, for a new round of negotiations over Iran's nuclear programme. There is no reason to be optimistic about the talks, despite the initial mood expressed by Brussels and Washington. Iran refused to rejoin talks for 14 months and played an elaborate game of brinkmanship over the location of the talks until the last minute - even suggesting Beijing, Baghdad and Damascus as possible venues for the meetings.

It has accepted that talks would occur without preconditions and its nuclear programme would be the focus of discussion - a sign that Western capitals read as proof that the combined pressure of economic sanctions and diplomatic isolation is working.

But Iran may not necessarily be willing to compromise. After all, Tehran is mostly defiant - words of moderation being expressed only by exiled figures like former nuclear negotiator Seyed Hossein Mousavian and his patron, former president, Akbar Hashemi Rafsanjani. Such articulations of a possible compromise voiced by Iranian opposition figures fall far short of the minimum required to build Western confidence after so much deception over the years by Iran.