Kuwait Times

Iran nuclear talks soldier on

Rouhani’s chief of staff off to Vienna on ‘special mission’

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VIENNA: Tortuous talks towards a Iran nuclear deal ploughed yesterday with the head of the UN’s atomic watchdog having apparently failed in Tehran to advance a nuclear bomb probe, a major hurdle to the accord. Iranian President Hassan Rouhani’s chief of staff, Mohammad Nahavandia­n, meanwhile headed to the negotiatio­ns in Vienna, in what the official IRNA news agency called a “special mission”.

“Important progress has been made but questions on technical issues and the wording (of the deal) remain,” Iranian Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif said on a seventh day of negotiatio­ns.

“My impression is that the political will (to get a deal) exists but that this has not yet been transmitte­d to the bureaucrat­s” working on the text, Zarif, due to meet US Secretary of State John Kerry later, told Iranian television. Ahead of a Tuesday deadline, the chief negotiator­s of Iran, the United States and the European Union haggled for six hours on Thursday night until 3:00 am (0100 GMT), a senior US official said.

“We have five days remaining... The technical work is advancing on the main text, on the appendices,” a western diplomat said. “It feels like the end.”

Other foreign ministers besides Zarif and Kerry were expected back in Vienna Sunday evening and to stay until Tuesday to get the job done, the diplomat said. The P5+1 — the United States, Russia, China, Britain, France and Germany want an accord that curbs Iran’s nuclear activities so that making an atomic bomb is all but impossible.

In exchange Iran, which says its program is for peaceful purposes like electricit­y generation and not to get the bomb, would see painful sanctions progressiv­ely lifted.

It would end a 13-year standoff over Iran’s suspect nuclear program, and draw the curtain on almost two years of intense negotiatio­ns since Rouhani came to power in August 2013.

Russia’s top negotiator Sergei Ryabkov on Thursday voiced cautious optimism, saying the document both sides were working on was “91 percent” finished. “I can’t predict how many hours it will take to resolve this situation. But all parties are of the opinion that this matter will be resolved in the coming days,” Ryabkov, deputy foreign minister, told Russian news agency TASS.

Possible military dimensions It will be up to the Internatio­nal Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) to verify Iran is sticking to its side of the bargain through enhanced inspection­s of Iran’s nuclear facilities.

But the P5+1 want the watchdog also to be able to visit sites where there is no declared nuclear material to probe alleged efforts, before 2003 and possibly since, to develop a nuclear weapon in secret. On Thursday the IAEA chief Yukiya Amano visited Tehran to meet Rouhani and others in an attempt to jumpstart a stalled probe into these so-called “possible military dimensions” of Iran’s activities. But after returning a statement suggested that no breakthrou­gh on the issue which Western powers say is vital for the final dealhad happened.

“I believe that both sides have a better understand­ing on some ways forward, though more work will be needed,” Amano, who was expected to debrief the later P5+1 on his trip, said in a brief statement. Iran rejects the allegation­s, saying they are based on bogus intelligen­ce provided to a gullible and partial IAEA by the likes of the CIA and Israeli intelligen­ce agency Mossad. Abbas Araghchi, Iran’s lead negotiator in Vienna, told Iranian media Friday that Tehran was “ready to cooperate with Mr. Amano so that it can be proved that these accusation­s and claims.. are baseless”.— AFP

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 ??  ?? VIENNA: A journalist rests outside the Palais Coburg Hotel where the Iran nuclear talks meetings are being held in Vienna yesterday. —AFP
VIENNA: A journalist rests outside the Palais Coburg Hotel where the Iran nuclear talks meetings are being held in Vienna yesterday. —AFP

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