Iran nuke talks extended by week

Tehran said to meet key provision capping uranium reserves

Energy Secretary Ernest Moniz (left), Secretary of State John Kerry and Wendy Sherman, undersecretary for political affairs, meet with Iranian officials Tuesday in Vienna, where negotiations on a nuclear agreement with Iran were extended for a week hours before Tuesday’s deadline for completing the talks expired.
Energy Secretary Ernest Moniz (left), Secretary of State John Kerry and Wendy Sherman, undersecretary for political affairs, meet with Iranian officials Tuesday in Vienna, where negotiations on a nuclear agreement with Iran were extended for a week hours before Tuesday’s deadline for completing the talks expired.

VIENNA -- World powers and Iran on Tuesday extended negotiations for a nuclear agreement by a week as the United Nations nuclear agency prepared to announce Tehran had met a key condition for a deal -- significantly reducing its stocks of enriched uranium that could be used for atomic weapons.

photo

AP

Iranian Foreign Minister Javad Zarif (center) laughs during a meeting with U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry at a hotel in Vienna on Tuesday. Pushing past a deadline, world powers and Iran extended negotiations for a comprehensive nuclear agreement by a week.

Iran's failure to comply would have undermined the negotiations, which are aimed at curbing the country's nuclear program for a decade in exchange for tens of billions of dollars in relief from international economic sanctions.

The State Department announced the extra days of talks hours before Tuesday's expiration of the deadline for their completion. The extension holds in place nuclear restrictions that Iran agreed to 20 months ago as well as slightly eased conditions for Iranian business with the world.

Those preliminary measures have been prolonged to Tuesday "to allow more time for negotiations to reach a long-term solution," State Department spokesman Marie Harf said. The statement came after U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry held a day of meetings in Vienna with the foreign ministers of Iran and Russia and other key officials.

The day originally had been envisioned as the culmination of almost two years of secret, then public, negotiations aimed at assuring Iran cannot produce nuclear weapons and providing the Iranian people a path out of their international isolation.

But officials said over the weekend that they were nowhere near a final accord, and Iran's foreign minister flew back to his capital for further consultations amid increased signs of backtracking by his country's supreme leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei.

In Washington, President Barack Obama said Tuesday that there will be no nuclear deal with Iran if inspections and verification requirements are inadequate.

"I will walk away from the negotiations if, in fact, it's a bad deal," Obama said during a news conference with Brazilian President Dilma Rousseff.

Obama said it's still unclear whether Tehran can meet the commitments made in a preliminary deal struck in Switzerland in April.

"There has been a lot of talk on the other side from the Iranian negotiators about whether in fact they can abide by some of the terms that came up in Lausanne," Obama said. "If they cannot, that's going to be a problem."

As for Iran's reduction in its stockpile of enriched uranium, diplomats said the country had removed a hurdle that nuclear experts had been watching closely over the past several weeks.

Uranium can be used to generate energy or as the fissile core of a nuclear weapon, depending on its enrichment level. Under the preliminary deal from November 2013, Iran agreed to cap its stockpile of lower-enriched uranium at a little more than 7.6 tons and transform any remainder into a form that would be difficult to reconvert for arms use.

Although amounts were permitted to fluctuate, Iran had to come under the cap by Tuesday. And as of only a month ago, the U.N. nuclear agency reported the stockpile at more than 8 tons.

Iran's compliance officially will be made public today in a report by the Vienna-based International Atomic Energy Agency, said the diplomats, who weren't authorized to speak publicly on the confidential report and demanded anonymity.

The week-long extension has political overtones as well. An agreement by Tuesday would give the Obama administration time to submit the deal to Congress by July 9. Congress would then have 30 days to review it, during which time Obama would not be able to ease sanctions.

If negotiations drag past July 9 without a deal, that congressional review period would extend to 60 days. If lawmakers were to build a veto-proof majority behind new legislation enacting new economic sanctions or preventing Obama from suspending existing ones, the administration would be prevented from living up to an accord.

Iran, for its part, warned about consequences if the West fails to hold up its end of the bargain.

The official IRNA news agency reported that President Hassan Rouhani said Iran will intensify its nuclear activities if it detects violations from the countries negotiating the deal.

Talks in Austria's capital restarted Tuesday after a one-day interruption, with Iran's chief diplomat returning from Tehran and insisting he had a mandate to finalize a nuclear agreement. The promise came despite statements by Khamenei in recent weeks that appeared to renege on a framework that his representatives agreed to three months ago in Lausanne.

The diplomacy has reached a "very sensitive stage," but progress is possible, Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif said.

Information for this article was contributed by George Jahn, Nasser Karimi, Julie Pace and Jim Kuhnhenn of The Associated Press.

A Section on 07/01/2015

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