Arab Times

Sanctions relief if Iran halts N-work

TALKS OFFER SLIM HOPE… ISRAEL URGES TOUGHER MEASURES Polls weigh on possible outcome

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ALMATY, Feb 26, (Agencies): Major powers offered Iran limited sanctions relief in return for a halt to the most controvers­ial part of its atomic work during the first day of nuclear talks on Tuesday, and Iran promised to respond with a proposal on the same scale.

The talks in Kazakhstan were the first in eight months between Iran and the five permanent members of the UN Security Council plus Germany — the “P5+1” — on a decade-old dispute that threatens to trigger another war in the Middle East.

Iran has used the time since the last meeting in June to further expand activity that the West suspects is aimed at enabling it to build a nuclear bomb, something that Israel has suggested it will prevent by force if diplomacy fails. The two-day negotiatio­ns in the city

of Almaty follow inconclusi­ve meetings last year in Istanbul, Baghdad and Moscow.

Western diplomats described the first day of talks as “useful” but said Iranian negotiator­s did not immediatel­y respond to the P5+1’s demand that Tehran closes its undergroun­d nuclear facility Fordow, at the centre of their concerns.

“Hopefully the Iranians will be able to reflect overnight and will come back and view our proposal positively,” said a spokesman for European Union foreign policy chief Catherine Ashton who oversees Iranian diplomacy for the six powers.

With the Islamic Republic’s political elite preoccupie­d with worsening infighting before a presidenti­al election in June, few believe the meeting will yield a quick breakthrou­gh.

“It is clear that nobody expects to come from Almaty with a fully done deal,” the EU spokesman, Michael Mann, said before the meeting started.

A US official said that the offer — an updated version of one rejected by Tehran last year — would take into account its recent nuclear advances, but also take “some steps in the sanctions arena”.

For years, the powers had attempted a mix of economic pressure and diplomacy to persuade Iran to scale back its atomic work, but Tehran has insisted that sanctions are lifted before it complies with any demands.

In Almaty, a source close to the Iranian negotiator­s told reporters: “Depending on what proposal we receive from the other side we will present our own proposal of the same weight. The continuati­on of talks depends on how this exchange of proposals goes forward”.

At best, diplomats and analysts say, Iran will take the joint offer from the United States, Russia, France, Germany, Britain and China seriously and agree to hold further talks soon on practical steps to ease the tension. Initial meetings could involve only technical experts, who cannot strike deals.

US Secretary of State John Kerry said in Berlin that he hoped Iran “will make its choice to move down the path of a diplomatic solution”.

But Iran, whose chief negotiator Saeed Jalili is close to Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei and is a veteran of Iran’s 1980s war against Iraq and the Western powers that backed it, has shown no sign of willingnes­s to scale back its nuclear work.

It says it has a sovereign right to carry out nuclear enrichment for peaceful energy purposes, and in particular refuses to close the undergroun­d Fordow enrichment plant, a condition the powers have set for any sanctions relief.

A UN nuclear watchdog report last week said Iran was for the first time installing advanced centrifuge­s that would allow it to significan­tly speed up its enrichment of uranium, which can have both civilian and military purposes.

Accelerati­ng Western sanctions on Iran over the last 14 months are hurting Iran’s economy and slashing oil revenue. Its currency has more than halved in value, which in turn has pushed up inflation.

The central bank governor was quoted on Monday as saying Iran’s inflation was likely to top 30 percent in coming weeks as the sanctions contribute to shortages and stockpilin­g. Iranians say inflation is already much higher than that official figure.

But analysts say the sanctions are not close to having the crippling effect envisaged by Washington and — so far at least — they have not prompted a change in Iran’s nuclear course.

Western officials said the powers’ offer would include an easing of restrictio­ns on trade in gold and other precious metals if Tehran closes Fordow.

Few believe the latest attempt to forge a compromise will yield any major breakthrou­ghs, but negotiator­s are optimistic­ally casting it as a stepping stone toward reaching a workable solution.

Officials described the latest diplomatic discussion­s as a way to build confidence with Iran as the country steadfastl­y maintains its right to enrich uranium in the face of harsh internatio­nal sanctions.

“The offer addresses the internatio­nal concern on the exclusivel­y peaceful nature of the Iranian nuclear program, but it is also responsive to Iranian ideas,” said Michael Mann, spokesman for EU foreign policy chief Catherine Ashton, who is leading the negotiatio­ns. “We’ve put some proposals forward which will hopefully allow Iran to show some flexibilit­y.”

Mehdi Mohammadi, a member of the Iranian delegation, said Tehran was prepared to make an offer of its own to end the deadlock but will resist some of the West’s core demands.

The Obama administra­tion is pushing for diplomacy to solve the impasse but has not ruled out the possibilit­y of military interventi­on in Iran to prevent it from acquiring a nuclear weapon. Israel has threatened it will use all means to stop Iran from being able to build a bomb, potentiall­y as soon as this summer, raising the specter of a possible Mideast war.

Meanwhile, Avigdor Lieberman, the head of Israel’s foreign and defence committee, on Tuesday called for tougher sanctions against Iran to curb its nuclear drive, saying the current measures were not enough.

Speaking as world powers were holding talks with Iran over its disputed nuclear programme, the former foreign minister said Israel had “no illusions on Iran’s intention of dragging out the process and wasting time”.

“Based on the experience with North Korea, the internatio­nal powers must realise that sanctions alone will not suffice,” Lieberman said in remarks relayed by the parliament­ary committee’s spokesman.

“In order to rein them in, it’s time to resort to more practical measures,” he said without indicating their nature or source.

The P5+1 — the UN Security Council’s five permanent members and Germany — were in Kazakhstan on Tuesday holding crunch talks with Iran aimed at breaking a decade of deadlock over its nuclear drive.

Hopes are low of a breakthrou­gh at the talks — the first such since a meeting in Moscow in June 2012 — and Iranian officials have doused expectatio­ns by insisting they will offer no special concession­s.

Israel — the Middle East’s sole, albeit undeclared, nuclear power — believes Iran is seeking a nuclear weapon, as do the the United States and much of the West. Tehran strongly denies the charge.

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