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NUKEWARS
Kerry, Zarif hold crucial nuclear talks ahead of deal deadline
By Nicolas REVISE
Geneva (AFP) May 30, 2015


Iran, N. Korea 'collaborate' on nuclear arms: Iranian opposition
Paris (AFP) May 29, 2015 - An exiled Iranian opposition group accused Tehran Thursday of a "vast collaboration" with North Korea in developing nuclear arms, alleging that experts from both countries made regular intelligence-sharing visits.

"The Iranian regime continues to collaborate with North Korea on nuclear warheads and ballistic missiles," the National Council of Resistance of Iran (NCRI) said in a report citing sources close to the Iranian government.

North Korean experts spent a week in the Iranian capital in April this year, the report said, staying at a site close to the country's defence ministry.

It was the third such visit by a North Korean nuclear delegation in 2015 alone, according to the report.

Senior Iranian scientist Mohsen Fakhrizadeh was meanwhile in North Korea when it held a third nuclear test in February 2013, the NCRI said, and Iranian experts went to the country on a regular basis.

Impoverished but nuclear-armed North Korea is heavily sanctioned following a series of nuclear and missile tests staged in violation of UN resolutions.

Tehran has always denied seeking to develop nuclear arms, saying its nuclear programme is for civilian purposes only.

But the opposition group said Iran had "no intention" of renouncing what it said was an active strategy to acquire a nuclear bomb.

The NCRI is a political umbrella of five Iranian opposition groups, the largest of which is the People's Mujahedeen Organization of Iran, which was once banned in Europe and the United States as a terror group.

US State Department spokesman Jeff Rathke said the report was unlikely to alter the progress of ongoing negotiations with Iran on curtailing its nuclear programme.

"We're examining the report. But we don't have any information at this time that would lead us to believe that these allegations impact our ongoing negotiations over Iran's nuclear programme.

"We have not been able to verify (the allegations) thus far," he said.

The People's Mujahedeen has long opposed the nuclear negotiations, and with the NCRI has made several important revelations of the existence of secret nuclear sites in Iran.

Iran on Thursday warned global powers against making "excessive demands" in talks aimed at sealing a deal, after France demanded access to its military installations.

US Secretary of State John Kerry will once again meet Iranian counterpart Mohammad Javad Zarif in Geneva on Saturday, after weeks of behind-the-scenes technical discussions in Vienna seeking to narrow the gaps on curtailing Iran's nuclear programme.

June 30 is the deadline for a comprehensive agreement.

Tehran rejected a key Western demand for site inspections Saturday as US Secretary of State John Kerry and his Iranian counterpart held intense talks to secure a nuclear deal ahead of a looming deadline.

The Geneva talks between Kerry and Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif in the run-up to the June 30 deadline come amid heightened diplomatic moves to try to end a 12-year standoff and put a nuclear bomb beyond Iran's reach.

Kerry and Zarif huddled for six hours in a leading hotel with their delegations and top European Union official Helga Schmid before ending the discussions.

"Secretary Kerry and Foreign Minister Zarif, along with their teams, had a thorough and comprehensive discussion of all of the issues today," a senior State Department official said.

"We are committed to working to close the remaining gaps and to staying on the schedule we've set forth to get this done," the official added.

But just before the Geneva talks got underway, senior Iranian nuclear negotiator Abbas Araghchi told state television it would be "out of the question" for UN inspectors to question Iranian scientists and inspect military sites as part of a final nuclear deal with world powers.

Iranian news agencies IRNA and ISNA said lower-level discussions with the United States would resume on Thursday in Vienna, without citing any sources.

After an interim accord struck in Geneva in November 2013, Washington and Tehran are trying to nail the final details of a ground-breaking agreement that would see Iran curtail its nuclear ambitions in return for a lifting of crippling international sanctions.

Sealing a long-elusive deal with the Islamic republic could give US President Barack Obama his biggest foreign policy achievement yet.

After three decades of enmity, it would also pave the way to bringing Iran back into the international fold and create fresh impetus to resolve a host of conflicts in the Middle East.

The Geneva meeting came as the United States and its partners -- Britain, China, France, Germany and Russia -- seek to finalise the complex pact.

- Time running out -

On April 2, Iran and the "P5+1" -- as Washington and its partners are known -- agreed after eight days of tough talks in the Swiss city of Lausanne to the main outlines of a nuclear deal, with Tehran agreeing to rein in and mothball large sections of its nuclear programme.

But differences remain, with both the United States and Iran under immense pressure from hardliners not to make major concessions.

Since the April 2 accord, technical experts have been meeting behind the scenes to overcome the remaining issues. But many of the decisions now need to be made at a political level.

Another US official said that the accord would have "multiple annexes", perhaps as many as three or more, which are already being drafted.

And despite rumblings from both Iranian and French officials that the talks may drag on beyond June 30, US officials insisted that was not on the table.

- 'Snapback'-

Several sticking points remain, including the possible military dimensions of the Iranian programme and the demands by the P5+1 group for UN inspections of Iranian military bases.

Iran is demanding an accelerated lifting of US, EU and UN sanctions, while the P5+1 wants a "snapback" mechanism to be put in place, enabling the measures to be quickly reimposed if Tehran breaks the deal.

"Kerry will stress to Zarif the importance of granting access for inspections," a western diplomat said.

"It's one of the key legs of the stool. It's not the only leg, but if it is not included then the stool will fall over."

Yukiya Amano, the head of the UN's nuclear watchdog, told AFP this week that Iran had agreed to implementing the Additional Protocol of the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty that allows for snap inspections.

"When we find inconsistency or when we have doubts, we can request access to the undeclared location for example, and this could include military sites," he said.

nr-ach/pjt/ser

Kerry


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NUKEWARS
Iran nuclear talks snag on access to military sites
Vienna (AFP) May 30, 2015
With the top US and Iranian diplomats meeting Saturday in Geneva one month before a deadline for a historic nuclear deal, demands for UN inspections of Iranian military bases appear to be becoming a problem. Tehran is uneasy about letting foreigners go poking around such sites, saying that since no nuclear material is present, the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) watchdog has no rig ... read more


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