Most of Iran's parliament members issued a statement on Sunday containing conditions that must be met if Tehran returns to compliance with the 2015 nuclear deal with world powers, the state news agency IRNA reported.

250 members of parliament agreed that the United States and the European parties to the agreement should provide guarantees not to withdraw from the agreement after its revival, and not to activate a mechanism to re-impose sanctions on Tehran.

In the statement directed to Iranian President Ibrahim Raisi, the parliamentarians demanded the Iranian government not to abandon Tehran's red lines in the Vienna negotiations, and not to give up what they described as national interests under any circumstances.

The deputies said - in their statement - that the government should learn from past experiences and not abide by any agreement with the United States, France, Britain and Germany without taking the necessary guarantees, given that these countries did not abide by their commitments and imposed illegal sanctions on the Iranian people.

The statement also indicated that Parliament is the one who will allow the government to undo the steps to reduce nuclear commitments, after reviewing its report on lifting sanctions on the oil and banking sectors.

The statement demanded that all US sanctions be lifted in a verifiable manner.

Iran's ambassador to Qatar, Hamid Reza Dehghani, said that the negotiating team in Vienna is authorized to end the differences that prevent the signing of an agreement.

Dehqani stressed that Western fears about his country's nuclear program are just pretexts to evade commitment to previous agreements.


 30 month agreement

On the other hand, Israeli Prime Minister Naftali Bennett expected today, Sunday, that the talks in Vienna between Tehran and the major powers will lead to reviving the agreement on Iran's nuclear program "soon", warning that this understanding will be "weaker and shorter" than it was when it was concluded in 2015.

Bennett said - at the beginning of the weekly session of his government - that the possible agreement between the great powers and Iran will be for a period of two and a half years, and that Iran will receive tens of billions of dollars in return for the agreement, and the lifting of restrictions and sanctions.

He added that the money that Iran will get as a result of the agreement "will reach terrorism in the region, and will endanger us and other countries, as well as endanger the American forces in the region."

He stressed that Israel is preparing for the next day in all circumstances and at all levels, in order to preserve and protect the security of its citizens by its own strength.

Israel opposes the Vienna talks aimed at reviving the agreement negotiated between Tehran and the six major powers, which allowed the lifting of many sanctions imposed on Iran in exchange for limiting its nuclear activities and ensuring the peace of its program.