Iran,
world powers resume push for nuclear deal by July 20
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[July 03, 2014]
VIENNA (Reuters) - Iran and six
world powers resumed talks on Thursday aimed at clinching a long-term
deal later this month on the scope of Tehran's contested nuclear
program, seeking to bridge still wide gaps in negotiating positions.
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The cost of failure could be high. If diplomacy falls short, the
risk of Israeli air strikes on Iranian nuclear sites could rise, and
with it the threat of a wider Middle East war.
After informal contacts on Wednesday, chief negotiators from Iran,
the United States, France, Germany, China, Russia and Britain began
a full plenary session shortly after 9 a.m. (0700 GMT), the sixth
round of talks in Vienna since February.
They have less than three weeks to try to agree on the future
dimensions of Iran's uranium enrichment program and other issues if
they are to meet a self-imposed July 20 deadline for a deal. Western
officials privately acknowledge that an extension of the talks might
be needed.
Washington and some of its allies have imposed sanctions on Iran
over suspicions that its nuclear program is designed to produce
weapons - a charge denied by Iran, which says it is only interested
in producing electricity and other peaceful projects.
Iran says it is Israel's assumed atomic arsenal that threatens
regional peace and stability.
July 20 is the expiry date of an interim accord that granted Iran
modest relief from economic sanctions after it curbed some aspects
of its nuclear work. But an extension of up to half a year of the
deadline for a long-term accord is possible.
The powers want Iran to scale back enrichment capacity sharply to
deny it any capability to quickly accumulate enough fissile material
for a nuclear bomb.
Iran says it needs to expand its enrichment capacity to fuel a
network of nuclear power plants, although these have yet to be built
and it would take many years to launch just one of them.
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Iranian Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif took to YouTube on
Wednesday to deliver a message that Iran was ready to take steps to
ensure its nuclear program remains peaceful but would not "kneel in
submission" to do a deal with the powers.
In an article in Monday's Washington Post, U.S. Secretary of State
John Kerry said Iran's "public optimism about the potential outcome
of these negotiations has not been matched, to date, by the
positions they have articulated behind closed doors".
European Union foreign policy chief Catherine Ashton is shepherding
the negotiations on behalf of the six powers. Zarif heads the
Iranian delegation in Vienna.
(Reporting by Fredrik Dahl, Parisa Hafezi and Louis Charbonneau;
Editing by Mark Heinrich)
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