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May 31, 2015

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US, Iran discuss nuclear pact, but Tehran says no to site inspections

TEHRAN yesterday rejected a key Western demand for site inspections just as US Secretary of State John Kerry and his Iranian counterpart launched crunch talks to secure a nuclear deal ahead of a looming deadline.

The Geneva talks between Kerry and Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif in the run-up to the June 30 deadline came amid heightened diplomatic moves to try and end a 12-year standoff and put a nuclear bomb beyond Iran’s reach.

Kerry and Zarif met in a leading hotel, greeting each other warmly and chatting as they walked together along the corridor to the meeting room.

Asked by a journalist whether they expected to meet the deadline, Zarif smiled and said: “We will try.” Kerry did not respond.

But even as talks got under way, senior Iranian nuclear negotiator Abbas Araghchi told state TV it would be “out of the question” for United Nations inspectors to question Iranian scientists and inspect military sites as part of a final nuclear deal with world powers.

After an interim accord struck in Geneva in November 2013, Washington and Tehran are trying to nail the final details of a ground-breaking deal that would see Iran curtail its nuclear ambitions in return for a lifting of crippling international sanctions.

Sealing a long-elusive deal with the Islamic republic could give US President Barack Obama his biggest foreign policy achievement yet.

After three decades of enmity, it would also pave the way to bringing Iran back into the international fold and create fresh impetus to resolve a host of conflicts in the Middle East.

The Geneva meeting came as the US and its partners — Britain, China, France, Germany and Russia — seek to finalize the complex pact.

US officials said the talks could spill over into a second day as the clock ticks down to the deadline.

On April 2, Iran and the “P5+1” — as the US and its partners are known — agreed after eight days of tough talks in the Swiss city of Lausanne to the main outlines of a nuclear deal, with Tehran agreeing to rein in and mothball large sections of its nuclear program.

But differences remain, with both the US and Iran under pressure from hardliners not to make major concessions.

A senior State Department official told reporters on Friday that Kerry wanted to meet with Zarif to discuss the “really tough sticking issues.”

Despite rumblings from Iranian and French officials that the talks might drag on beyond June 30, US officials insisted that was not on the table.

“We’ve been very clear that we are not contemplating an extension,” the State Department official said.

Some sticking points remain, including the possible military dimensions of the Iranian program and the demands by the P5+1 group for UN inspections of Iranian military bases.




 

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