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Tehran getting ready for space satellite launch by Staff Writers Moscow (Sputnik) Dec 15, 2021
In early December, Iranian media outlets reported that Tehran's civilian space programme stipulates launching four satellites, including one that was described as being "under the final phase of preparation". Tehran appears to be getting ready for a space satellite launch amid the Vienna talks on the Iran nuclear deal, according to several satellite images showing alleged activity at the Islamic Republic's Imam Khomeini Spaceport. One image published by the private San-Francisco-based company Planet Labs, Inc. and obtained by the news agency AP reportedly showed a support vehicle and hydraulic crane that AP claimed appeared at the site ahead of previous launches. In another picture, a purported uptick in the number of cars is seen at the launch pad, according to AP. The news outlet cited Jeffrey Lewis, an expert at the James Martin Centre for Nonproliferation Studies at the Middlebury Institute of International Studies, as arguing that all this is "fairly traditional pre-launch activity". The claims follow the Iranian state-run news agency, IRNA, reporting on 5 December, that Iran's space programme allegedly had four satellites ready for launch, including the low-orbit imaging satellite Zafar 2, which is "under the final phase of preparation". The reported developments unfold against the backdrop of the ongoing Vienna talks on the 2015 Iran nuclear deal, also known as the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action (JCPOA). Earlier in December, US negotiators walked out of the negotiations, claiming Iran "does not seem to be serious about doing what's necessary to return to compliance", despite Washington being the only original signatory to the JCPOA currently outside the agreement. The Iranian Foreign Ministry, in turn, pointed the finger at Washington, insisting that "the US reluctance to fully abandon the sanctions is the major challenge to progress in the [Vienna] talks". In 2018, the Trump administration unilaterally withdrew the US from the JCPOA after accusing Iran of breaching the agreement. In the wake of Washington's exit, Iran discarded the constraints on its nuclear programme as the White House began a "maximum pressure" campaign that saw a number of sanctions imposed on Tehran. US President Joe Biden has signalled his administration's readiness to return to the Iran deal.
2020 Satellite Launch by Iran Shortly thereafter, then-US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo argued that Iran should "be held accountable for what it's done", claiming that the launch violated UN Security Council Resolution 2231. The document, however, does not prohibit Iran from launching satellites, but rather calls upon the country to avoid testing and launching any type of ballistic missiles, including those used in space programmes. Source: RIA Novosti
Are the Iran nuclear talks facing collapse? Vienna (AFP) Dec 14, 2021 International diplomats have been cloistered in a Vienna hotel discussing how to salvage a deal that was intended to prevent Iran developing an atomic bomb. Can the landmark 2015 agreement be saved or has time run out to revive the deal? - What's at stake? - Talks to rescue the agreement struck by Iran with world powers to limit its nuclear ambitions in return for sanctions relief hang in the balance. Tehran has been accused of backsliding on progress made earlier in the year, effective ... read more
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