logo
Europeans try to coax Iran back to diplomacy, as Trump considers strikes

Europeans try to coax Iran back to diplomacy, as Trump considers strikes

Reuters5 hours ago

GENEVA, June 20 (Reuters) - European foreign ministers are set to meet their Iranian counterpart on Friday aiming to create a pathway back to diplomacy over its contested nuclear programme despite the U.S. actively considering joining Israeli strikes against Iran.
Ministers from Britain, France and Germany, known as the E3, as well as the European Union's foreign policy chief spoke to Abbas Araqchi earlier this week and have been coordinating with U.S. Secretary of State Marco Rubio.
In a rare call they pressed upon Araqchi the need to return to the negotiating table and avoid further escalation. At Iran's suggestion the two sides agreed to meet face-to-face.
The talks will be held in Geneva, where an initial accord between Iran and world powers to curb its nuclear programme in return for sanctions lifting was struck in 2013 before a comprehensive deal in 2015. They come after negotiations between Iran and the United States collapsed when Israel launched what it called Operation Rising Lion against Iran's nuclear facilities and ballistic capabilities on June 12.
"The Iranians can't sit down with the Americans whereas we can," said a European diplomat. "We will tell them to come back to the table to discuss the nuclear issue before the worst case scenario, while raising our concerns over its ballistic missiles, support to Russia and detention of our citizens."
The European powers, who were not part of Iran's nuclear negotiations with the United States, had grown increasingly frustrated by the U.S. negotiating strategy in the talks. They deemed some of the demands unrealistic, while fearing the possibility of a weak initial political framework that would lead to open-ended negotiations.
Two diplomats said there were no great expectations for a breakthrough in Geneva, where the European Union's foreign policy chief will also attend.
But they said it was vital to engage with Iran because once the war stopped, Iran's nuclear programme would still remain unresolved given that it would be impossible to eradicate the know-how acquired, leaving it potentially able to clandestinely rebuild its programme.
An Iranian official said Tehran has always welcomed diplomacy, but urged the E3 to use all available means to pressure Israel to halt its attacks on Iran.
"Iran remains committed to diplomacy as the only path to resolving disputes — but diplomacy is under attack," the official said.
Prior to Israel's strikes the E3 and U.S. put forward a resolution that was approved by the Board of Governors of the International Atomic Energy Agency, a U.N. watchdog, which declared Iran in breach of its nuclear non-proliferation obligations.
As part of last week's IAEA resolution, European officials had said they could refer Iran to the United Nations Security Council later in the summer to add pressure on Iran if there was no progress in the nuclear talks.
That would be separate to them reimposing UN sanctions, known as the snapback mechanism, before October 18 when the 2015 accord expires.
The Europeans are the only ones who can launch the snapback mechanism, with diplomats saying the three countries had looked to set a final deadline at the end of August to launch it.
"Iran has repeatedly stated that triggering snapback will have serious consequences," the Iranian official said.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Russia's nuke warning to Trump: Kremlin tells US a tactical nuclear weapon strike on Iran would be 'catastrophic' as it warns America and Israel not to kill Khamenei
Russia's nuke warning to Trump: Kremlin tells US a tactical nuclear weapon strike on Iran would be 'catastrophic' as it warns America and Israel not to kill Khamenei

Daily Mail​

time20 minutes ago

  • Daily Mail​

Russia's nuke warning to Trump: Kremlin tells US a tactical nuclear weapon strike on Iran would be 'catastrophic' as it warns America and Israel not to kill Khamenei

Russia has today warned Donald Trump any use of tactical nuclear weapons in Iran would be 'catastrophic' as the US President says he will decide in the next two weeks whether to join in Israel 's war. Russian news service Tass is reporting the Kremlin has issued a fresh plea for Trump to avoid using bunker busting bombs on Iranian nuclear facilities amid fears it could spark wider conflict across the Middle East. Last night, Iran-backed militias threatened to join in the war with Israel if the Trump administration enters the Israel-Iran conflict.

EU bars Chinese firms from most medical device tenders
EU bars Chinese firms from most medical device tenders

Reuters

time26 minutes ago

  • Reuters

EU bars Chinese firms from most medical device tenders

BRUSSELS, June 20 (Reuters) - The European Union will bar Chinese companies from participating in EU public tenders for medical devices worth 60 billion euros or more ($68.9 billion) per year after concluding that EU companies are not given fair access in China. The measure announced by the European Commission on Friday is the first under the EU's International Procurement Instrument, which entered into force in 2022 and is designed to ensure reciprocal market access. The new restrictions are likely to increase tensions with Beijing inflamed by EU tariffs on China-built electric vehicles, Chinese measures against EU brandy and curbs on exports of rare earths that the EU wants resolved by an EU-China summit in July. The Commission said on Friday that it would exclude Chinese companies from EU government purchases above five million euros. An EU official said, guided by figures of Medtech Europe, the EU medical technology market was worth some 150 billion euros in 2023, with public procurement accounting for a 70% share. Contracts of over 5 million euros were only 4% of tenders, but made up some 60% by value, the official said. Successful bids will have to ensure they include no more than 50% of medical devices from China. If there are no alternative suppliers, the exclusion will not apply. EU members backed the plan earlier this month. The Commission has previously said it found "clear evidence" that China favoured Chinese devices for hospitals and its tender conditions led to abnormally low bids that profit-oriented companies could not offer. A Commission official said the ban would cover medical equipment including imaging equipment, artificial body parts and medical clothing. China's commerce ministry has previously described the proposed EU measures as "protectionist", urging the EU to be fair and transparent and for both sides to resolve differences through cooperation and dialogue. The Commission said China had not proposed any corrective action to remedy the situation, but an agreement was still possible. ($1 = 0.8708 euros)

Strike by strike, how Israel cleared a path to Iran's nuclear fortress
Strike by strike, how Israel cleared a path to Iran's nuclear fortress

Telegraph

time34 minutes ago

  • Telegraph

Strike by strike, how Israel cleared a path to Iran's nuclear fortress

A week into Israel's Operation Rising Lion, its jets are able to criss-cross Iran and strike targets with impunity. Waves of Israeli aircraft fly sorties against Iran's military and nuclear sites, untouched by Tehran's air defences and air force after they were hammered in the first days of the assault. The extent and ease of the air superiority achieved in those first hours of the campaign have surprised even Israel's security figures and now allow commanders almost free reign to hit the regime's most important strategic sites as they choose. 'We thought it would be much harder,' Zohar Palti, a former Mossad intelligence director, said this week. 'It was much faster than we anticipated.' Satellite images of the aftermath of air strikes are now disclosing how Israel cleared a path to Tehran's missile and nuclear programmes. Taking Iran's airfields out of action The early hours of Operation Rising Lion saw heavy attacks on Iranian air defences and its air force to put them out of action for good, including direct strikes on runways. While Iran's decades-old F-14A Tomcat and revamped F-5 Tigers would pose little threat to Israel's aircraft, the strikes quickly made sure they could not even get off the ground. Images of Tabriz Air Base and Hamadan Air Base, both in western Iran, show main runways and taxi runways cratered by strikes. The same images reveal extensive damage to hardened aircraft shelters nearby. Elsewhere, the Israel Defense Forces posted infrared targeting camera footage of a pair of F-14A Tomcat fighters being destroyed next to hardened aircraft shelters at Mehrabad International Airport in Tehran. As well as air strikes, Israeli special forces and intelligence services claimed to have infiltrated Iranian territory to hit air defences with a swarm of short-range drones, in attacks likened to Ukraine's recent audacious attack on Russia's long-range bomber bases. Destroying air defences Overall, the Israeli assault is said to have destroyed dozens of air defence missile launchers and radar sites within the first few days of the campaign. This destruction then allowed Israeli planes to approach closer without fear of being shot down and to stop relying on long-range missiles to hit strategic targets in the capital, and at nuclear sites including Isfahan, Natanz and Fordow. Iran has a wide variety of air defence systems, including Russian-supplied S-300PMU-1/2 long-range and SA-15 short-range surface-to-air missiles, as well as homemade Sayyad-2 and 3 missiles. Yet Justin Bronk, a senior research fellow at the Royal United Services Institute, said when the assault came, Iran had 'few technical answers' to the combination of Israeli F-35i stealth fighters that could quickly find and jam missile defences, and a wave of supporting F-16s and F-15s that could launch precision missile strikes from a distance. 'The speed with which the Israeli Air Force has established sufficient air superiority to use free-fall bombs rather than stand-off missiles against targets in Tehran, Isfahan, Natanz and Fordow has been impressive,' he told The Telegraph. Satellite imagery of one of the country's oldest missile bases, operated by the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) near the western province of Kermanshah, shows significant damage. Several buildings appear destroyed along with two mountain-side tunnel entrances. Iran is known to keep its missiles buried deeply and in underground silos for precisely this reason, but the imagery suggests Israel was still able to target them. At another military site about 20 miles west of Tehran, at Bid Kaneh, which has long been associated with the missile programme, images reveal damage to multiple buildings. In one image, the roof of one large building appears to have been penetrated. The facility was the site of a large explosion in 2011, when several staff working on the country's missile programme were killed. There has been speculation that the explosion was the result of sabotage. Israeli military officials say their air dominance and their resulting ability to hit ballistic missile stores and launchers have stemmed the number of missiles Tehran can launch. Israel estimates it has destroyed more than a third of Iran's total missile launchers. Opening a path to nuclear facilities Central among Israel's targets are Iran's nuclear facilities. Israel has long warned that Iran is racing towards a nuclear bomb and has said its current attacks are needed to stop the imminent production of a weapon. However, America's own intelligence agencies have concluded Tehran is not building a nuclear weapon. The underground uranium enrichment plant at Natanz was an early target for the campaign, having been struck on Friday. Nuclear experts have estimated the strike destroyed the overground section of the Pilot Fuel Enrichment Plant, where cascades of centrifuges were producing enriched uranium. Images also show four 'critical buildings' were damaged in Isfahan, including a Uranium conversion facility and a fuel plate fabrication plant. Iran's petrochemical industry has also been targeted. On Saturday, Israel hit the Shahran fuel and gas depot north-west of Tehran. Yet despite the air superiority, Israel may now find the limits of what it can do by air alone, military analysts said. One key site, the Fordow Fuel Enrichment Plant, located 20 miles from the ancient clerical city of Qom, is still thought to be untouched. The site's hardened underground halls are thought to be impervious to all but America's most powerful 'bunker buster' munitions. With Donald Trump, the US president, reported to have approved the plan of attack should America wade into the conflict, a strike of Fordow could be imminent. Thanks to Israel's efforts, any attempt to strike the nuclear fortress will likely go unchallenged. However, Andreas Krieg, a senior lecturer at the School of Security Studies at King's College London, told Reuters that while Israel had achieved 'quite a lot of operational and tactical successes... translating that into a strategic success will require more than what air power can deliver'.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store