["Mohammed Javad Zerif, Iran's foreign minister said in a tweet from
the negotiations on Saturday afternoon that both sides had "shown
flexibility" and were "ready to make a good deal for all" if both
sides could push to bridge the remaining gaps"

So, the tone, at the moment, is cautiously optimistic.

http://www.ft.com/cms/s/0/7f74525e-d47d-11e4-9bfe-00144feab7de.html

Last updated: March 28, 2015 4:36 pm
Talks on Iran nuclear deal edge closer, say diplomats
Sam Jones in Lausanne

Iranian foreign minister Mohammad Javad Zarif (second left) is leading
Tehran's delegation in Lausanne

Representatives of the world powers gathering in the Swiss city of
Lausanne this weekend insist they are closer than ever to reaching a
nuclear deal with Iran.
***Mohammed Javad Zerif, Iran's foreign minister said in a tweet from
the negotiations on Saturday afternoon that both sides had "shown
flexibility" and were "ready to make a good deal for all" if both
sides could push to bridge the remaining gaps.*** [Emphasis added.]

More
ON THIS TOPIC
Israel in push to counter Iran deal
Q&A Iran nuclear talks
Iran and west narrow gap in nuclear talks
Comment Farideh Farhi
IN IRAN
Iran's hardliners turn on moderates
Ayatollah throws support behind nuclear deal
Vote for hardliner deals blow to Rouhani
Iran hardliners fear Rouhani nuclear deal

Yet while an agreement is needed by the official framework early next
week -- or even late this weekend -- diplomats say almost two-thirds of
any final text is still up for negotiation. Many of the most
contentious issues also remain unresolved.
Arriving in Lausanne early on Saturday afternoon, German foreign
minister Frank-Walter Steinmeier indicated that while an end to the
negotiations was close, the remaining hours of the talks would be
anything but easy.
"The summit is in sight, but when you're crossing the mountains, the
last few metres are the most critical," Mr Steinmeier said on the
steps of the neo-Baroque Beau Rivage hotel -- the grand setting for the
talks on the shore of lake Geneva.
Diplomats expect discussions to continue well into the evening.
Philip Hammond, the British foreign secretary on Friday signalled that
the talks would go down to the wire, when he hinted at the potential
for the deadline for a deal to be extended by two weeks to April 14 --
the point at which the Easter recess of the US Congress will come to
an end.
A "step change" was still needed in a small number of key areas in the
negotiations, Mr Hammond said.
Officials in Lausanne still insist a March deal is what they are
working towards.
As the security situation worsens in the Middle East, the Iran nuclear
talks have offered a rare opportunity for diplomacy to resolve one of
the region's most intractable disputes.

A deal with Tehran has become one of the foreign policy objectives for
President Barack Obama. But the prosect of nuclear detente with the
Islamic regime has also invited fierce criticism, alienating regional
allies of the west in Israel and the Gulf region.
Diplomats are adamant that any announcement will be both substantial
and comprehensive. They also insist, as Mr Hammond's remarks
suggested, that a deal will have to address all the disputed areas,
not just those they had already agreed upon, as many had expected.
"We are not playing a game about this. We are not going to come out
with a broad, wishy-washy understanding that falls apart the minute
our backs are turned," said a senior UK diplomat, when asked about
whether the text of the agreement could be short on detail.
"If there is an agreement over the coming days, it will set out the
broad parameters under all the key issues," the diplomat added.
The current framework demands a broad, high-level agreement by march,
with negotiators then having until the end of June to flesh out the
technical details and ink a final, signed deal to permanently curb
Iran's atomic programme in return for a phased end to crippling
economic sanctions.
Delegations from the so-called P5+1 -- the five permanent members of
the security council and Germany -- began arriving in Switzerland on
Thursday to kick off a frantic five days with counterparts from Tehran
in order to hit Tuesday's looming month-end deadline.

Hopes of a deal have been raised as weeks of urgent diplomacy -- in
particular between the US and Iran -- appear to have nudged negotiators
close to an agreement on the central issue: the number of centrifuges
Iran would be permitted to keep operating to enrich its own uranium.
Ahough positive, an announcement on centrifuges alone in the coming
days would be like bolting the front door only to leave the back
window open, said one diplomat in Lausanne.
Sources familiar with the negotiations said the areas which have yet
to be resolved included dismantlement of the surplus centrifuge
cascades; research and development into newer, faster centrifuges; the
future of the fortified nuclear facility at Fordow; and the phasing of
sanctions relief. Of those, two are particularly thorny. Diplomats
fear that the development of new centrifuges could hollow out the
breakout time -- the minimum period it would take Iran to build a
nuclear weapon if it decided to renege on the deal -- no matter how
tight other areas of agreement are.
Iran has also pushed hard for the early dismantlement of UN-level
sanctions, the key leverage that P5+1 has over Tehran.
Cliff Kupchan, chairman of Eurasia Group, a consultancy, said: "This
is one of those issues where there are 10 balls in the air at the same
time. But I think on substance we [will] have a one-year breakout
time.".
A 12-month breakout period has been the key objective of the P5+1.
Agreement on these main points would mean areas of specific technical
disagreements would start to "peel away", Mr Kupchan said. "The key
will be very rigorous back-end inspection and verification, perhaps an
additional protocol plus," he added, referring to the possibility of
an even stricter nuclear inspection regime undertaken by the
International Atomic Energy Agency.
In depth

Iran under Rouhani
'Iran after Rouhani' in depth
Iran's President Hassan Rouhani is looking to pursue a foreign policy
of moderation after tough financial sanctions have brought the Islamic
Republic's economy to a standstill
Further reading
Notwithstanding the substance of any agreement next week, it is also
still not known what form the deal will take. Most involved in the
process expect a "fact sheet" but not a formal memorandum of
understanding and certainly no signed agreement.
The danger, diplomats say, is that if too little is hammered out in
the coming days, then the next three months of technical negotiations
could fail to gain traction.
A thin political deal in the next few days could also derail the
remainder of the talks as hawks in Washington and hardliners in Tehran
attack its lack of substance. On the other hand, too much agreed in
writing would have its pitfalls too, offering critics a raft of
half-formed agreements to pick apart.

-- 
Peace Is Doable

-- 
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups 
"Green Youth Movement" group.
To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email 
to [email protected].
To post to this group, send an email to [email protected].
Visit this group at http://groups.google.com/group/greenyouth.
For more options, visit https://groups.google.com/d/optout.

Reply via email to