The United States and Iran entered a critical phase of negotiations
over Iran's disputed nuclear program this weekend, as Secretary of State
John Kerry and Iran's Foreign Minister Javad Zarif meet in Switzerland
to determine if they can bridge their differences.
The talks are
reaching a climax as leaders from across the world, including Israel and
the U.S. Congress, watch to see if a historic deal emerges to curb
Iran's nuclear program in return for a lifting of U.S. and Western
sanctions. Negotiators are trying to conclude a general agreement by a
self-imposed March 31 deadline, with details to be filled in by June.
Israel
and many in Congress have warned that the Obama administration may
grant too many concessions to get a deal that would allow Iran to
violate an agreement and develop nuclear weapons once the punitive
sanctions that have crippled its economy are lifted.
Congressional
leaders have threatened to vote on increased sanctions if they do not
like the terms. Israel has threatened military action to prevent Iran
from obtaining nuclear weapons that could threaten the entire region.
In
a sign of congressional skepticism about an agreement, the Senate voted
100-0 Thursday for a non-binding resolution that calls for new
sanctions against Iran if it is caught cheating on any deal that is
reached.
Iran has insisted that its nuclear program is peaceful
and that its technological quest to produce energy and medical isotopes
is a sovereign right. The oil-rich nation wants the sanctions lifted so
it can rejoin the global financial system and sell oil on the open
market again
The United States has not changed its bottom line regarding a deal,
and it is still committed to making sure Iran would need at least a year
to produce enough highly enriched nuclear material for a bomb if it
broke the agreement, a senior administration official told USA TODAY.
The official, who was not authorized to comment on the sensitive
negotiations, asked not to be identified.
On Friday, Ali Akbar
Salehi, head of the Atomic Energy Organization of Iran, told Mehr News
that "a mutual understanding" covering much of the deal has been
reached.
"A couple of technical issues are still remaining
unresolved which we are working on," Salehi said. "There are difficult
issues to be resolved."
Although the U.S. has taken the lead in the Iran talks, Britain, France, Germany, Russia and China also are participating.
In
Washington, British Foreign Secretary Philip Hammond said the parties
were "better than halfway" to a deal, according to the Associated Press.
French
Foreign Minister Laurent Fabius told reporters in New York on Friday,
"There has been some progress, but there are things which are not yet
solved." Fabius arrived in Lausanne on Saturday. His British and Russian
counterparts have said they will join the talks over the weekend as
well.
Issues still to be resolved involve the number and types of
centrifuges Iran can use to produce nuclear fuel, the ability of
inspectors to gain access to all possible nuclear sites and Iran's
willingness to discuss past efforts to produce nuclear weapons.
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