The Mercury News

U. S.- Iranian nuclear talks down to wire

WhiteHouse: Chance of deal is ‘ at best 50- 50’

- By George Jahn and Bradley Klapper

LAUSANNE, Switzerlan­d — With less than a week to the deadline for an Iran nuclear deal, U. S. Secretary of State John Kerry worked with top Iranian and European officials Wednesday to try to close gaps blocking agreement.

Racing to fill out a framework for rolling back Iran’s nuclear program and punitive U. S. economic sanctions, U. S. Energy Secretary Ernest Moniz and Iranian atomic energy chief Ali Akbar Salehi met again Wednesday in the Swiss city of Lausanne to discuss the technical obstacles to a deal. Kerry and Iranian Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif were to join the talks later.

Negotiatio­ns are expected to continue until Friday. And although neither side is promising a breakthrou­gh over the next three days, each is hoping to resolve as many lingering issues as possible, from the speed of a U. S. sanctions drawdown to the level of inspection­s on Iranian nuclear sites.

A sign of an impending deal would be the discussion­s wrapping up with an announceme­nt of more talks next week and the involvemen­t of America’s negotiatin­g partners: Britain, China, France, Germany and Russia. Up to now, Washington and Tehran have mainly negotiated between each other, but all seven countries would have to sign off on an accord.

The government­s have set for themselves a deadline on a preliminar­y deal by the end of March, with a full agreement by July.

Salehi, an MIT- educated physicist and former Iranian foreign minister, suggested Tuesday a deal was close, saying one “final item” remained contentiou­s. He didn’t specify, but said that matter’s resolution would mean “on technical issues, things are clear on both sides.”

“As a whole, I am optimistic,” he told reporters.

The United States was less upbeat. “There’s no doubt they have made substantia­l progress over the past year,” White House spokesman Josh Earnest said. But he declared the chances of an agreement “at best 50- 50.”

Washington wants to stretch the time Iran would need to make a bomb from a few months to a year. The deal taking shape would limit Iran’s uranium enrichment and other nuclear activity for at least a decade, with the restrictio­ns slowly lifted over several years.

Congressio­nal Republican­s have threatened to upend the diplomacy, claiming any deal would be ineffectiv­e.

And Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, whose party scored a resounding victory in Israel’s election Tuesday, is also an opponent.

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