U.S.,
Iran positive after nuclear talks, say much left to do
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[February 24, 2015]
By Lesley Wroughton
GENEVA (Reuters) - The United States made
some progress in talks with Iran on its nuclear program and managed to
"sharpen up some of the tough issues", a senior U.S. official said on
Monday, but both sides said much remained to be done.
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Negotiators from Iran and six major powers agreed to resume talks
next Monday at a venue to be decided, the official said, speaking
after U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry and Foreign Minister
Mohammad Javad Zarif held two-day talks in Geneva.
Zarif told Iran's Fars news agency: "We had serious talks with the
P5+1 representatives and especially with the Americans in the past
three days ... But still there is a long way to reach a final
agreement."
As Kerry's plane touched down in Washington later on Monday, a
senior State Department official said Kerry and Zarif would meet
again next week and details were being worked out.
The P5+1 group -- the United States, Russia, China, Britain, France
and Germany -- are seeking to negotiate an agreement with Tehran to
address concerns that Iran is seeking nuclear weapons technology,
something it denies.
"These were very serious, useful and constructive discussions. We
have made some progress but we still have a long way to go. We did
very much sharpen up some of the tough issues so we can work to
resolution," the senior U.S. administration official told reporters.
Negotiators hope to meet a self-imposed March 31 deadline for an
initial political deal, but the U.S. official said that would not
"make us rush to an agreement that does not fulfill the objectives
that the president has given to us."
The aim of ensuring Iran does not acquire a nuclear weapon "has to
be met and that is not about the deadline, it is about the purpose",
the official said.
Iran, which denies having any nuclear weapons program, hopes a deal
will bring relief from international sanctions.
"BREAKOUT" CAPACITY
Diplomats say the six major powers aim for a deal lasting at least
10 years under which Iran would need a year or more to produce
enough highly enriched uranium for a single nuclear bomb, the
so-called "breakout" capacity.
"We have always said we will have a one-year breakout time for a
double digit number of years and that remains the case," the senior
U.S. official said on Monday.
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Reflecting the technical nature of the latest talks, U.S. Energy
Secretary Ernest Moniz and Iran's atomic nuclear chief Ali Akbar
Salehi took part. Helga Schmid, political director of the European
Union's External Action Service, also attended.
The approaching deadline has caused divisions between the United
States and one of its closest allies, Israel, which has called the
talks "dangerous" and "astonishing". The United States has accused
it of distorting Washington's position.
Israeli Defence Minister Moshe Ya'alon said in a statement on
Monday: "The agreement with Iran as it is coming together now is a
great danger to Western world peace and a threat to Israel's
security."
Ya'alon said the deal would permit Iran to be freed from current
economic sanctions on it while continuing to enrich uranium. He
called Iran "the most dangerous regime" and a central factor behind
instability in the Middle East.
Israel has the Middle East's only nuclear arsenal and has threatened
to attack Iran if it is not satisfied over plans for Tehran's
nuclear program.
(Additional reporting by Parisa Hafezi in Ankara and Allyn
Fisher-Ilan in Jerusalem; Writing by Stephanie Nebehay; Editing by
Tom Miles, Tom Heneghan and Tom Hogue)
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