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NUKEWARS
Iran's comprehensive nuclear accord -- a big deal
by Staff Writers
Vienna (AFP) Feb 18, 2014


Iran has 'political will' for lasting nuclear deal: Zarif
Tehran (AFP) Feb 18, 2014 - Iran has the "political will" to seek a comprehensive agreement with world powers over its disputed nuclear drive, Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif said as talks are to resume Tuesday.

"We believe we can reach an agreement and we have come here with the political will to reach a final agreement," Zarif said late Monday after meeting EU foreign policy chief Catherine Ashton in Vienna.

"If all sides enter the talks with the political will to resolve the issue, we will be able to reach positive results but it will take time," he added in statements carried by state news agency IRNA.

Three days of talks open Tuesday in Vienna between Iran and the P5+1 group of nations -- Britain, China, France, Russia, the United States and Germany.

Building on an interim deal reached in November, the negotiations will seek a comprehensive accord that will once and for all allay Western suspicions that Iran's nuclear programme masks military objectives, a claim denied by Iran.

"Our objective is to provide the guarantee in the negotiations that Iran's nuclear programme will remain peaceful," Zarif said after a working dinner with Ashton who represents the P5+1.

His remarks came a day after supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei said the nuclear talks with world powers would "lead nowhere" but that he did not oppose them.

"I repeat it again that I am not optimistic about the negotiations and they will lead nowhere, but I am not against them," said Khamenei, who has final say on all key state matters.

Iran began implementing in January the landmark November deal under which it agreed to freeze some nuclear activities for six months in exchange for modest sanctions relief.

Under the "comprehensive" deal now being sought, which the parties aim to conclude and begin implementing by November, the powers will want Iran to scale back its activities permanently.

Iran and the five permanent members of the UN Security Council plus Germany began talks on Tuesday in Vienna on reaching a comprehensive nuclear deal.

Iran is under UN and Western sanctions because of suspicions -- denied by Tehran -- that it wants to develop nuclear weapons under the guise of its civilian programme.

It already has enough low-enriched uranium for several nuclear bombs if it decided to purify it to weapons-grade, something which would be quickly detected by UN inspectors.

The fear is that Iran will soon reach "breakout" capacity -- that it could make enough highly-enriched material for a bomb before the International Atomic Energy Agency notices.

- Interim deal -

After a decade of failed initiatives and rising tensions, the seven countries struck an interim deal in Geneva on November 24 that was hailed as a huge breakthrough.

Under this agreement, Iran on January 20 stopped enriching uranium to medium purities and undertook to convert its stockpile of this material.

It pledged not to add more centrifuges or to make advances on a new reactor being built at Arak that the West is concerned might provide Iran with plutonium, an alternative to uranium for a bomb.

The IAEA, which already keeps close tabs on Iran's facilities, was given additional inspection rights including daily visits to the Fordo and Natanz enrichment sites.

In exchange the powers put up some $6-7 billion in sanctions relief and said they would not impose any new nuclear-related sanctions.

- Tick tock -

The six-month freeze can be extended by mutual consent.

The parties now aim to negotiate a "comprehensive solution", which according to the Geneva "Joint Plan of Action" they want to conclude and commence implementing by November 2014.

This would likely reduce Iran's programme to within what the Geneva agreement called "mutually agreed parameters consistent with (Iran's) practical needs" and for a "long-term duration".

Analysts say this means cutting the number of centrifuges enriching uranium to a few thousand from the current 19,000, and possibly closing Fordo.

In addition, the powers may press Iran to change the unfinished "heavy-water" Arak reactor into a "light-water" model so that it produces far less plutonium.

Iran will also have to submit to much more intrusive inspections by the IAEA.

And it will have to answer long-standing IAEA questions about alleged efforts, mostly before 2003, to develop nuclear weapons, rejected as baseless by Iran and also questioned by some experts.

In return, all sanctions would be lifted and Iran, according to the Geneva deal, "would fully enjoy its right to nuclear energy for peaceful purposes" -- but also "in conformity with its obligations".

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NUKEWARS
Iran, world powers on long road to final nuclear deal
Vienna (AFP) Feb 18, 2014
Nuclear talks between Iran and world powers entered new territory Tuesday as negotiators embarked on what both sides predicted will be a long and difficult path towards a lasting deal. The aimed-for historic accord would essentially let Iran retain its civilian nuclear programme, but on a modest scale and with enough oversight to make developing atomic weapons all but impossible. Success ... read more


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