Merkel urges Iran to return to the negotiating table over its nuclear programme

Outgoing chancellor reaffirms Germany’s continued commitment to Israel’s security

Angela Merkel at  a reception outside the Yad Vashem Holocaust Museum in Jerusalem:  “This is a very critical situation. There are very, very decisive weeks ahead of us.” Photograph: Gil Cohen-Magen/AFP/Gettty
Angela Merkel at a reception outside the Yad Vashem Holocaust Museum in Jerusalem: “This is a very critical situation. There are very, very decisive weeks ahead of us.” Photograph: Gil Cohen-Magen/AFP/Gettty

The coming weeks will be decisive for Iran's nuclear programme, Outgoing German chancellor Angela Merkel said on a visit to Israel, urging Tehran to come back to the negotiating table as its stalled talks with world powers hang in the balance.

The US has warned time is running out to revive a 2015 accord with Iran that would lift sanctions in return for limiting its nuclear work.

A sixth round of negotiations ended inconclusively in June and no date’s been set for the next one after a transition of power in Iran complicated diplomacy.

The international community is in a very difficult situation, Merkel said on Sunday. Although the administration of US President Joe Biden has sought a return to the deal, "the days go by without Iran giving any indications that it wants to restart the talks" while it continues sensitive uranium enrichment work. Highly enriched uranium could be used to build a nuclear bomb.

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"This is a very critical situation," she said at a news conference in Jerusalem with Israeli prime minister Naftali Bennett. "There are very, very decisive weeks ahead of us."

Western countries and Israel suspect the programme is aimed at making a bomb; Iran denies this.

“The message to Iran is unambiguous: There must be a quick return to the negotiating table,” Ms Merkel said. “The original deal was not ideal but it was better than nothing,” she added.

Mr Bennett reiterated Israel's position that a revived nuclear accord would embolden Iran.

Ms Merkel, who will leave office soon, said the new German government would remain committed to Israel’s security, a position it has taken for decades to try to atone for the country’s Nazi past. She also said, however, Israel’s settlement policy has made a two-state solution of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict difficult. – Bloomberg