Iran Nuclear Talks: ‘Major Differences’ Remain
VIENNA (Reuters) – The six world powers seeking to
negotiate an historic agreement with Iran to curb its nuclear program
plan to carry on negotiating beyond a Tuesday deadline, a senior U.S.
official said on Sunday.
Iranian Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif was to leave
Vienna and return to Tehran for consultations with the country’s
leadership on the state of negotiations, Iran said.
European Union foreign policy chief Frederica Mogherini
said earlier on Sunday it was not impossible to get an accord by the
self-imposed deadline but that a few extra days may be needed.
Foreign ministers from the negotiating countries were gathering in Vienna on Sunday to assess where the talks stood.
“Zarif will return to Tehran tonight and will come back to
Vienna tomorrow,” Iran’s Tasnim news agency said, citing an unnamed
Iranian official.
An Iranian official told Reuters that Zarif would “consult with the leadership” over the talks inVienna.
The U.S. official, who spoke to reporters on condition
of anonymity, said Washington was not troubled by Zarif’s decision to
return to Tehran overnight, saying it was always expected that ministers
would come and go from Vienna as the talks heated up.
The negotiations aim to limit Tehran’s nuclear program in
exchange for a lifting of U.S., European Union and United Nations
sanctions on Tehran.
The United States, Israel and some Western nations fear
that Iran has been trying to develop a nuclear weapons capability, but
Tehran says its program is for peaceful purposes only.
In November, the seven nations involved in the talks set a
late March deadline for a framework agreement, which they ultimately
reached on April 2, and a June 30 deadline for a comprehensive deal.
Highlighting how much work remains, British Foreign
Minister Philip Hammond said on arrival in Vienna that major challenges
remained, including on the parameters already agreed in April.
“There are a number of different areas where we still have
major differences of interpretation in detailing what was agreed in
Lausanne,” Hammond told reporters.
“There is going to have to be some give or take if we are
to get this done in the next few days,” he said. “No deal is better than
a bad deal.”
In addition to Britain, Iran and the United States, the talks include China, France, Germany and Russia.
Speaking after a cabinet meeting in Jerusalem, Israeli
Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said too many concessions were being
made to Tehran.
“We see before our very eyes a stark retreat from the red
lines that the world powers set themselves only recently, and publicly,”
said Netanyahu, whose country is generally believed to have the Middle
East’s only nuclear arsenal.
“There is no reason to hasten into signing this bad deal, which is getting worse by the day.”
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