Bank Of Baku

Western officials suggest Iran tries to wiggle out of nuclear pledges

Western officials suggest Iran tries to wiggle out of nuclear pledges
# 29 June 2015 00:50 (UTC +04:00)

Baku-APA. Iran is backtracking from an interim nuclear agreement with world powers three months ago, Western officials suggested on Sunday, as U.S. and Iranian officials said talks on a final accord would likely run past a June 30 deadline, APA reports quoting Reuters.

Securing an historic agreement would end a more than 12-year nuclear standoff between Iran and the West and open the door to suspending sanctions that have crippled Tehran's economy. It could also help ease the diplomatic isolation for an Iran that has become increasingly assertive across the region.

 

Highlighting how much work remains in the nuclear negotiations, British Foreign Minister Philip Hammond said on arrival in Vienna that major challenges remained, including on the parameters already agreed in April in Lausanne, Switzerland.

"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."

Other Western officials echoed Hammond's remarks, saying some of the backtracking involved the mechanics of monitoring Iranian compliance with proposed limits on nuclear activities.

"It feels like we haven’t advanced on the technical issues and even gone back on some," a Western diplomat said on condition of anonymity.

 

Another Western official traced the apparent backtracking to a speech by Iranian Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei last week, in which he ruled out freezing sensitive nuclear work in the country for a long time.

"His speech last week seems aimed at constraining (Iranian negotiators') flexibility in the last stretch of the talks, as he has done at a number of key intervals over the last two years," a Western diplomat told Reuters, citing an internal government intelligence assessment of Khamenei's speech.

But he added that Khamenei's tendency to issue vague directives "could leave the negotiators with some limited room to play with and to find creative solutions that could help wrap up the diplomatic process."

 

The main differences are on the pace and timing of sanctions relief for Iran and on the nature of monitoring mechanisms to ensure Tehran does not cheat on any agreement.

U.S. and European negotiators also want to ensure there is a mechanism for restoring sanctions if Tehran fails to meet its commitments under any future accord.

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