by Staff WritersVienna (AFP) May 14, 2014
Diplomatic efforts by Iran and world powers towards a potentially
historic nuclear deal enter treacherous uncharted territory Wednesday with a
new round of talks in Vienna.
After three meetings that Washington says have enabled both sides
to "understand each other's positions", the negotiators aim this time
to start drafting the actual text of an accord.
Success could resolve one of the most intractable geopolitical
problems of the 21st century, but failure could plunge the Middle East into
conflict and start a regional nuclear arms race.
"If the odds of the talks collapsing are high, the stakes of
failure are higher," Ali Vaez, Iran analyst at the International Crisis
Group, told AFP. "Time is of the essence."
The five permanent members of the UN Security Council plus Germany
want Iran to reduce in scope its nuclear programme so as to make any dash to
build an atomic bomb virtually impossible.
In return the Islamic republic, which says its nuclear activities
are purely peaceful, wants the lifting of all United Nations' and Western
sanctions, which have hit its economy hard.
Iran's Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif, installed by
bridge-building new President Hassan Rouhani last year, said after the last
round that there was agreement on "50-60 percent" of issues.
But with both sides sticking to the mantra that "nothing is
agreed until everything is agreed" -- one US negotiator likened the
process to a "Rubik's Cube" -- this is not enough.
Arriving in Vienna Tuesday, both Iran and the United States sought
to dampen expectations that a deal was within easy reach, with Zarif saying a
"lot of effort" was still required.
A senior US official said the talks would be "very, very
difficult" and that there were still "significant gaps" between
the two sides and a "range of complicated issues".
"We do not know if Iran will be able to make the tough
decisions they must to assure the world that they will not obtain a nuclear
weapon and that their programme is for entirely peaceful purposes," the
official said.
She added that optimism raised in some quarters has "gotten
way out of control".
- Sticking points -
The parties aim to build on an interim deal struck in Geneva in
November under which Iran froze certain activities for six months in return for
minor sanctions relief. This expires on July 20.
Turning the Geneva deal into something permanent is a tall order,
however, particularly with sceptical hardliners in the United States, Iran and
Israel watching closely.
One major issue, the Arak reactor, appears to have been resolved,
with Iran indicating the design could be modified to ease concerns that it
could produce weapons-grade plutonium.
But others, most notably uranium enrichment and the sequence of
sanctions relief "could be harder to bridge," Kelsey Davenport from
the Arms Control Association told AFP.
Iran already has enough of low-enriched material for several bombs
if it decided to "break out" and use its 20,000 so-called centrifuges
to enrich this stockpile to weapons-grade.
The powers may therefore want Iran to slash the number of centrifuges,
or to agree to a cap on output per machine, but this may be a hard sell since
Iran's enrichment programme is a source of great national pride.
"Discussions on enrichment are and will be difficult,"
French Foreign Minister Laurent Fabius said on Monday.
Further hurdles to clear include Iran's development of new
centrifuges that can enrich many times faster than the current models, and
tougher inspections by the UN atomic watchdog.
Others are Iran's development of ballistic missiles, which could
carry nuclear warheads -- it denies wanting atomic weapons -- and its answers
to questions about past alleged "military dimensions" to its nuclear
work.
Source:
http://www.spacewar.com/reports/Iran_nuclear_talks_enter_dangerous_new_phase_999.html
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