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The goal is to hammer out an agreement to freeze Iran's nuclear
program for six months, while offering the Iranians limited relief from
crippling economic sanctions. If the interim deal holds, the parties
would negotiate final-stage agreements to ensure Iran does not build
nuclear weapons.
Only then would the most crippling sanctions on Iranian oil sales and financial transactions be rolled back.
"There
are narrow gaps, but they are important gaps," British Foreign
Secretary William Hague said about the drafting process. Iran's Fars
news agency quoted Iranian Deputy Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi as
saying "the dispute is over the wording" but he was unsure when a deal
might be final.
An agreement would cap nearly a decade of
inconclusive international efforts to halt Iran's expanding nuclear
program. Iran insists its program is for peaceful purposes and not aimed
at building nuclear weapons.
A deal would build on the momentum
of the historic dialogue opened during September's annual U.N.
gathering, which included a 15-minute phone conversation between
President Barack Obama and Iran's new president, Hassan Rouhani, after
three decades of U.S.-Iranian estrangement.
For the U.S. and its five partners, the chief concern is uranium enrichment.
Since
it was revealed in 2003, Iran's enrichment program has grown from a few
dozen enriching centrifuges to more than 18,000 installed and over
10,000 operating. The machines have produced tons of low-enriched
uranium, which can be turned into weapons grade material.
Iran
also has stockpiled almost 200 kilograms (440 pounds) of higher-enriched
uranium in a form that can be converted more quickly to fissile warhead
material than the low-enriched uranium. Its supply is nearly enough for
one bomb.
Based on comments from diplomats, the talks on Saturday
appear to have included ways Iran could retain some level of
enrichment, although at a level far below what's need for weapons.
While
saying they are ready for compromise, the Iranians are mindful of
criticism from hard-liners back home who oppose dealings with the United
States.
Statements on Saturday by senior Iranian negotiators
appeared to be an attempt to defuse domestic opposition to a deal that
skeptics see as surrendering their country's nuclear sovereignty.
"I
assure Iranians enrichment will never stop," Iran's state TV quoted
Foreign Minister Mohammad Abbas Zarif as saying. "Iran opposes any
demands restricting its rights.'"
The Iranians also are holding
out for maximum relief from economic sanctions. The United States and
its partners want to relax sanctions in small, incremental steps during
the six months of an interim agreement but not remove them entirely
pending a final stage deal.
Issues were believed to include the
level of sanctions relief and the future of a plutonium reactor under
construction at Arak that the six want closed. Plutonium can also be
used to make nuclear weapons.
With the talks already running two
days over schedule, it was unclear whether the negotiations would
continue Sunday. Kerry's spokeswoman, Jen Psaki, said he still planned
to travel to London on Sunday for meetings on other Middle East issues.
Kerry
and his counterparts from Russia, Britain, France, China and Germany
joined the Geneva talks after Iranian Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad
Zarif and top European Union diplomat Catherine Ashton reported progress
on enrichment and other issues Friday.
Their participation raised
speculation that an agreement was close -- an interpretation that the
foreign ministers themselves sought to discourage.
"We're not here
because things are necessarily finished," Britain's Hague told
reporters. "We're here because they're difficult, and they remain
difficult."
The U.S. administration has not confirmed details of
what concessions on economic sanctions it might offer. But a member of
Congress and legislative aides have said the White House was considering
releasing about $6 billion to $10 billion in Iranian funds frozen in
foreign banks.
Iran would also be allowed to sell petrochemicals
and be supplied with auto parts to revive its car industry and exports
of automobiles to parts of Asia. The aides and the member of Congress
demanded anonymity because they weren't authorized to divulge the
estimate publicly.
A senior U.S. official told reporters last week
that Iran is losing $5 billion a month in lost oil sales alone and $120
billion in total from all sanctions since their imposition, although he
did not give a time frame. The official demanded anonymity in keeping
with rules established by the U.S. administration.
The U.S.
administration is keen to keep rollbacks limited to placate influential
members of U.S. Congress who argue that pressure has brought Iran to the
negotiating table and cannot be relaxed until Tehran offers significant
concessions.
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