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US says Iran still looking to acquire nuclear material
by Staff Writers
Vienna (AFP) Jan 17, 2014


Iran slams US text on implementation of nuclear deal
Tehran (AFP) Jan 17, 2014 - Iran denounced Friday as "one sided" a text released by the United States summarising the implementation of the nuclear deal Tehran struck with world powers.

"The White House statement is a unilateral and one-sided interpretation of the unofficial agreements between Iran and P5+1" major powers, foreign ministry spokeswoman Marzieh Afkham said.

"By no means it is a criterion to evaluate or judge how the Geneva deal will be implemented," she added in statements carried by the official IRNA news agency.

In November, Iran agreed at talks in the Swiss city to roll back parts of its nuclear programme and halt further advances in exchange for the release of billions of dollars in frozen assets and limited relief from crippling sanctions.

Implementation of the six-month deal struck with the P5+1 group of Britain, China, France, Russia and the United States plus Germany, is slated to begin on Monday.

On Thursday the White House released a summary of "technical understandings" for implementation, which includes a timetable for inspecting Iranian nuclear facilities by the UN nuclear watchdog.

International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) experts are to arrive in Iran Saturday. They are due to be deployed at nuclear sites identified in the November agreement to ensure Tehran complies with its part of the deal, Iranian officials have said.

The text released by the White House also contains a payment schedule for nearly $7 billion (5.2 billion euros) in blocked Iranian foreign exchange holdings, a modest easing of sanctions in return for a freeze on some parts of the Iranian nuclear programme.

White House spokesman Jay Carney said the full text was made available to a restricted group of lawmakers and congressional aides.

He said the IAEA wants to keep certain aspects of the deal confidential, Carney said.

Washington released the text after US officials were forced to deny claims that there was a secret side deal accompanying the November deal.

Opponents of the deal, including Israel, said it gave up too much to Iran in return for too limited commitments to slow its nuclear activity.

And some in Congress want to slap new sanctions on Iran.

Tehran is still seeking to sidestep sanctions to get materials for its nuclear programme, a senior US official said Friday on a European tour seeking to cool renewed corporate enthusiasm about doing business in Iran.

Iran is "undoubtedly still looking for ways to acquire material for their nuclear programme," the US official, speaking in Austria on a tour also taking in Britain, Germany, Turkey, Italy and other places, said on condition of anonymity.

"We have seen over many years that the Iranians take advantage of the commercial and financial relationships that purport to be for legitimate purposes to surreptitiously acquire materials that they are looking for for their nuclear programme and their ballistic missile programme, to facilitate their support for terrorism," he said.

As a result he said that any "responsible" firm should think twice before seeking to do business with Iran when the Islamic republic gains minor relief from sanctions from Monday as part of a nuclear deal with world powers.

Under this "first step" accord struck in Geneva in November, Iran will -- from Monday -- freeze some of its nuclear activities for six months in exchange for a package of sanctions relief worth $6-7 billion, according to Washington.

Over this period, during which time Iran will still miss out on some $30 billion in oil revenues, Tehran and the world powers will seek to strike a long-term accord ending for good the long-running standoff over its nuclear work.

According to media reports, since the November deal Western firms have been falling over themselves to try and win business in the oil-rich Islamic republic.

But the US official said that with the core of sanctions still in place, most notably on Iran's banks, it "remains extraordinarily difficult" to do business in the Persian Gulf country, and that any new trade may contravene the sanctions.

"There is some enthusiasm in the business community about the prospect for business in Iran. One of my objectives (of this trip) is to temper that enthusiasm with a dose of reality," he said.

"The overtures that have been made here and elsewhere to the Iranian business community are I think premature, not good business, and they are not fundamentally helpful in the pathway to maximise the chances ... for a comprehensive resolution."

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