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Next weeks will tell if Iran can make nuclear deal: US
by Staff Writers
Washington (AFP) Oct 30, 2014


Iran wants sanctions lifted as part of nuclear deal: official
Paris (AFP) Oct 30, 2014 - Iran wants all Western sanctions to be lifted as part of a deal on its contested nuclear programme by a November deadline, a top official said Wednesday.

The announcement came amid intensifying efforts to conclude a definitive pact. The six powers in the talks with Iran -- Britain, China, France, Russia, the United States plus Germany, known as the P5+1 -- have set November 24 as the deadline.

The chairman of the Iranian parliament's National Security and Foreign Policy Commission Alaeddin Boroujerdi said the US proposal of a gradual lifting of sanctions was "unacceptable."

"If we want a definitive accord on November 24, there must be an immediate lifting of sanctions," he told a news conference in Paris.

A Western diplomat close to the negotiations with Iran on Monday said a firm deal by the deadline was highly unlikely, saying Tehran would have to make "significant gestures."

The aim is to close avenues towards Tehran ever developing an atomic bomb, by cutting back its enrichment programme, shutting down suspect facilities and imposing tough international inspections.

In return, the global community would suspend and then gradually lift crippling economic sanctions imposed on the Islamic republic.

But the two sides, despite long-running talks, remain far apart on how to reconcile their objectives.

The world will know in the coming weeks if Iran can make the "tough decisions" needed for a nuclear deal, US Secretary of State John Kerry said Thursday.

As the clock ticks down to a November 24 deadline for an agreement on reining in Iran's nuclear program in exchange for sanctions relief, Kerry vowed global powers were going to be "very careful, everything will be based on expert advice."

"Whether Iran can make the tough decisions that it needs to make will be determined in the next weeks," Kerry told a forum hosted by The Atlantic magazine.

He refused to give any odds on whether the "critical" deal would be reached, but he warned that any pact must be based on fact and science.

"This must not become an ideological, or a political decision," Kerry said.

The United States has pledged to shut all of Iran's pathways to a nuclear bomb "sufficient that we know we have a breakout time of a minimum of a year that gives us the opportunity to respond if they were to try to do that," Kerry added.

And he repeated the US insistence that "no deal is better than a bad deal."

While technical experts from Iran and the group of world powers known as the P5+1 have continued to work behind the scenes, no new date has yet been set for the next high-level talks between the political directors and ministers of the seven countries involved.

Kerry hosted a dinner for the EU's foreign policy chief Cathy Ashton late Wednesday as she steps down from her role, after having shepherded the P5+1 negotiations for years.

With all eyes on the diplomatic front, Kerry was also meeting Thursday with the head of the UN atomic watchdog Yukiya Amano.

All sides have repeatedly stressed that serious gaps still remain in the negotiations.

In a sign of the battles still to be resolved, a top Iranian official said Iran wants all Western sanctions to be lifted as part of a deal on its contested nuclear program.

The chairman of the Iranian parliament's National Security and Foreign Policy Commission Alaeddin Boroujerdi rejected as "unacceptable" the US proposal of a gradual lifting of sanctions.

"If we want a definitive accord on November 24, there must be an immediate lifting of sanctions," he told reporters in Paris.

Washington has said that under any deal, EU, US and UN sanctions would only be suspended initially -- meaning they could be swiftly re-imposed -- until Iran proved it had abandoned any moves toward a nuclear weapon.

"If we could take this moment of history and change this dynamic, the world would be a lot safer, and we'd avoid a huge arms race in the region where Saudis, Emiratis, Egyptians, others may decide that if they're moving towards a bomb, they've got to move there too," Kerry added.


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NUKEWARS
Iran denies claim that nuclear deal 'finalised'
Tehran (AFP) Oct 28, 2014
Iran's government was forced to deny Tuesday it had already struck a nuclear deal with the West, after a lawmaker accused its negotiators of secretly selling the country short. In a sign of the domestic political tension surrounding talks being held abroad with world powers, Iran's foreign ministry threatened to prosecute the member of parliament who said an agreement that breaches the Islam ... read more


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