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U.S. and Iran trade prisoners, signaling partial thaw in relations

The United States and Iran freed 10 people on Monday in a high-stakes prisoner swap that signaled a partial thaw in the icy relations between the longtime adversaries.

Five American citizens held in Iran will fly to the United States after a brief stop in the Persian Gulf nation of Qatar. The U.S. government, in exchange, released five Iranian prisoners and unblocked the transfer of $6 billion in frozen Iranian oil funds held in South Korea.

The deal, negotiated over several months, marks a major breakthrough for the bitter foes who remain at odds over a range of issues, including the rapid expansion of Tehran’s nuclear program, its ongoing military support for Russia and Iran’s harsh crackdown on internal dissent.

“We have received confirmation that the five freed Americans … are wheels up in Tehran and en route to Doha,” the Qatari capital, said a senior Biden administration official.

The prisoners’ release comes as a major relief to their families and supporters, many of whom have waited several years for their return. It has also come under harsh criticism from Republicans in Congress opposed to any agreement that involves the unfreezing of Iranian funds. Though under the agreement the money may be used only for the purchase of humanitarian goods, Republicans argue that the administration should have negotiated a deal with terms more favorable to the United States.

Amid the prisoner deal talks, the United States and Iran also have been discussing a possible informal arrangement that would seek to place some limitations on Iran’s nuclear program. U.S. officials have insisted, however, that those talks are unrelated to the prisoner-exchange negotiations.

The U.S. prisoners freed by Iran include Siamak Namazi, an Iranian American who had been behind bars in Tehran for nearly eight years, the longest duration the Islamic republic has jailed any American. Others include Morad Tahbaz, an Iranian American who also holds British citizenship, and Emad Shargi, an American Iranian dual citizen. Each was released from Iran’s notorious Evin Prison and placed under house arrest last month, an initial step in the deal.

Two other American detainees involved in the swap have not been publicly identified at the request of their families.

“This is a momentous day for the Namazi family who have not been together — all four of them — since early 2015,” Jared Genser, the Namazi family’s lawyer, said in an interview. “Frankly, we never knew this day was actually going to arrive. The family has been through an extraordinary trauma through this very, very long and painful process. There are many challenges that lie ahead.”

The complex deal involved a carefully choreographed process by both Tehran and Washington, according to U.S. government officials who spoke on the condition of anonymity to describe the sensitive arrangement.

As the Americans left Iranian airspace, the United States released five Iranians. U.S. officials have not publicly identified them, describing them as low-level nonviolent criminals who do not pose a threat to U.S. national security.

Earlier Monday, Nasser Kanaani, a spokesman for Iran’s Foreign Ministry, signaled that the deal was proceeding as planned.

“Two of the Iranian citizens released in America will return to [Iran], and another person will travel to another country due to the presence of their family, and the other two people will remain in the United States,” Kanaani told reporters, according to Iranian state media.

Meanwhile, a network of private banks and government financial institutions is finalizing the transfer of funds to accounts that Iran will have access to under the supervision of the United States.

The $6 billion had been held in South Korea, one of Iran’s largest oil customers, as a result of a waiver issued by the Trump administration in 2018 that permitted Seoul to continue purchasing Iran’s oil. Those funds became stuck in 2019 when the Trump administration tightened sanctions on Iran.

Over the last week, in preparation for the deal to be finalized, those funds were converted from Korean currency to euros before being moved to accounts in Qatar that can only be used for the purchase of non-sanctioned goods, such as food and medicine. U.S. officials say they will continue to have oversight of the money to ensure it is not being used for nefarious purposes.

Iran can access the money only after the Treasury Department’s Office of Foreign Assets Control issues a document saying the U.S. prisoners have reached their final destination, U.S. officials said.

Before the prisoner deal, the Biden administration’s rapport with Tehran was marked by deep distrust, largely over the failure to revive a nuclear deal that Biden had vowed to renew when he ran for president. Tehran has refused to talk directly with Washington, requiring third parties to help broker discussions.

The governments of Qatar and Oman played a significant role in facilitating discussions between the two sides over the detainees’ release and hosting the talks, said officials familiar with the matter. Switzerland, the United Arab Emirates and Iraq also played a role.

The United States’ European allies, who broadly support a revised deal to restrain Tehran’s nuclear program, hope that progress on detainees will help pave the way for more productive nuclear discussions.

Iran’s nuclear program has expanded significantly following the decision by President Donald Trump to pull the United States out of the 2015 nuclear deal. The accord, forged by the Obama administration, imposed strict limitations on Iran’s program in exchange for sanctions relief.

When asked if the prisoner deal might lead to productive talks on the nuclear front, a senior administration official said, “We do not close the door entirely to diplomacy, but we approach it with principled standards.”

“If we see the opportunity, we will explore it,” the official said.

George reported from Dubai.

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