Kerry,
Iran's Zarif to meet at U.N. anti-nuclear arms conference
Send a link to a friend
[April 27, 2015]
By Louis Charbonneau
UNITED NATIONS (Reuters) - Iranian Foreign
Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif will meet U.S. Secretary of State John
Kerry at the opening of a UN conference on the global anti-nuclear
weapons treaty on Monday, as they try to make progress in talks on a
long-term atomic deal.
|
Iran's top diplomat will be the first state party to the 1970
nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty to address its 190 signatories at
the United Nations headquarters in New York on behalf of 118
non-aligned nations that have signed the NPT, the world's benchmark
disarmament pact.
Zarif and Kerry will meet on the sidelines to discuss negotiations
on a landmark nuclear deal with the United States and five other
global powers as they try to secure a final agreement with Iran by a
June 30 deadline.
In a tentative deal reached on April 2 in Lausanne, Switzerland,
between Iran and the six powers, Tehran, which denies seeking
nuclear weapons, agreed to curb sensitive nuclear work for at least
a decade in exchange for ending sanctions that have crippled its
economy.
Diplomats need to iron out details about the timing of sanctions
relief, the future of Iran's atomic research and development
program, the exact nature of the IAEA's monitoring regime and what
kind of uranium stockpiles Tehran will be allowed to keep under any
final accord.
Sanctions are proving to be one of the biggest hurdles at the
moment.
Iran's Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei has said all sanctions,
including the most severe restrictions on its energy and financial
sectors, should be lifted the moment a deal is signed. Western
officials say that this is not what Tehran agreed to in Lausanne.
At that meeting, Zarif and European Union foreign policy chief
Federica Mogherini read a joint statement that said the
implementation of sanctions would be halted "simultaneously with the
IAEA-verified implementation by Iran of its key nuclear
commitments."
[to top of second column] |
Western officials say that means sanctions will be lifted only after
the IAEA verifies compliance.
A senior Iranian negotiator said last week that the latest round of
nuclear talks in Vienna between Iran and the six powers made good
progress.
U.S. Republican senators have pledged to try to toughen a bill
giving Congress the power to review a nuclear agreement with Iran, a
move that could further complicate the talks.
During this month's NPT meeting, Austria is leading an initiative to
ban nuclear weapons due to the immense humanitarian suffering they
cause. Over 70 countries are backing it.
Israel, which opposes the nuclear deal with Iran, will be attending
the conference as an observer for the first time since 1995 as it
eyes closer ties with Arabs, who also fear Tehran's nuclear
ambitions.
Israel is widely believed to have the Middle East's only nuclear
arsenal. Like nuclear-armed India and Pakistan, Israel is not a
signatory to the NPT. North Korea, which signed but later withdrew
from the NPT, has tested nuclear devices.
(Reporting by Louis Charbonneau; Editing by Alan Crosby)
[© 2015 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.]
Copyright 2015 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
|