Senators said they were continuing talks with the White House and their European partners, but that a widely expected mid-January deadline was not going to be met.
In October, President Donald Trump refused to certify that Iran was respecting its commitments on the 2015 nuclear agreement, but did not re-impose sanctions or abandon the deal itself.
Instead, he said it contained "many serious flaws" and left any decision to walk out of the accord up to Congress.
Since then, Congress has been locked in discussions on how to toughen the deal, under which Iran agreed to freeze its nuclear program in return for a lifting of punishing sanctions.
The new text being thrashed out by Congress seeks to unilaterally recalibrate the threshold at which US sanctions could be restored against Iran, something that has raised concerns with European co-sponsors of the accord.
"It’s moving along. Our European allies have been brought along in a very good way both by us but also the White House, (which) has done a very good job,” said Republican Bob Corker, head of the Senate Foreign Affairs Committee.
“I’m going back over to the White House tomorrow" to meet with members of the National Security Council, Corker said.
Congress had initially been expected to have a new bill ready by mid-January, 90 days from the previous certification date. That was also when Trump would be due to sign an extension of the suspension of sanctions.
But those moves will be all the more difficult for the US leader, who has openly denounced the Iranian regime's crackdown on anti-government protesters in the past week, and offered "great support" to those taking a stand against the country's leadership.
But Corker said Thursday that while "we’re making progress,” that mid-January deadline was off the table, and that any agreement would take several more weeks to work out.
“We don’t have a timeline," said Ben Cardin, the ranking Democrat on the committee.
The new law is expected to stipulate that restrictions on Iran's nuclear program be made permanent, rather than ending in 2025 as stated under the current accord, failing which the United States would resume sanctions lifted under the Obama administration.
The aim is to find a solution that would satisfy Trump and prevent him simply walking out of the agreement, as he has threatened in the past.
Cardin noted that Trump can decide "at any time whether he wants to end the nuclear agreement
Source: AFP
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