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From: The Arms Control Association <[email protected]>
Date: Tue, 23 Jun 2015 15:17:53 +0000
Subject: The P5+1 and Iran Nuclear Talks Alert, June 23
To: Sukla <[email protected]>

The latest news and analysis on the Iran nuclear negotiations.

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A Special Arms Control Association Newsletter

June 23, 2015

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** A Critical Mass of Diplomatic Energy?
------------------------------------------------------------

Key players are meeting and gathering ahead for what may be a final,
intense and continuous round of talks aimed at finalizing a
comprehensive agreement. Iranian Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif
flew to Luxemburg for talks with the German, French, and British
diplomats and EU foreign policy chief Federica Mogherini on Monday.

After meeting with Zarif, UK Foreign Secretary Philip Hammond said
that negotiations will go “up to the wire” but the parties aim to get
a “durable” comprehensive nuclear agreement by June 30.

Zarif returned to Tehran after the meeting, but Abbas Araqchi, deputy
foreign minister and negotiator, said that he would likely come to
Vienna later this week. U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry is also
expected to join the talks in Vienna later this week.

Undersecretary of State Wendy Sherman is already in Vienna, as are the
political directors from the other P5+1 countries (China, France,
Germany, Russia, and the United Kingdom). Sherman met with Araqchi and
Madjid Takht Ravanchi, another deputy foreign minister and member of
Iran’s negotiating team, yesterday. More meetings are scheduled for
today, and talks at the expert level continue.

—KELSEY DAVENPORT, director for nonproliferation policy, with DARYL G.
KIMBALL, executive director.


** Quick Reference Links
------------------------------------------------------------

The Nuclear Deal At-a-Glance
(http://armscontrol.us10.list-manage2.com/track/click?u=94d82a9d1fc1a60f0138613f1&id=df9dce2d29&e=2321be7db0)

                                                               Issue
Brief: Under a Microscope
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Experts Available for Interview
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         Solution to Iran's Arak Reactor
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Archived 
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 Iran  
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Nuclear Alerts 
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Additional Resources
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** Action by Majlis
------------------------------------------------------------

Iran’s parliament passed
(http://armscontrol.us10.list-manage.com/track/click?u=94d82a9d1fc1a60f0138613f1&id=36c578f70d&e=2321be7db0)
draft legislation on Sunday, June 22 that could complicate the
negotiations. Of the 213 members of Majlis present when the bill was
voted on, 199 voted for the measure.

To become law, the Guardian Council must ratify the bill. The council
is made up of 12 members, six are appointed by the Supreme Leader and
six by the Majlis.

According to translations of the legislation published in Persian by
IRNA, if ratified, the bill would prohibit inspections of military
sites and interviews with scientists. It also calls for the compete
lifting of sanctions against Iran early in an agreement.

Under the parameters agreed to on April 2, and as part of the November
2013 interim deal, Iran has already agreed to implement and eventually
ratify its additional protocol agreement with the International Atomic
Energy Agency (IAEA).

Iran’s additional protocol allows managed access to military sites by
inspectors if the IAEA has concerns about illicit Iranian nuclear
activities. This is standard for additional protocols
(http://armscontrol.us10.list-manage.com/track/click?u=94d82a9d1fc1a60f0138613f1&id=c7c309c826&e=2321be7db0)
.
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** Issue Recap: Blocking the Plutonium Pathway
------------------------------------------------------------

One of the primary U.S. policy goals is to block Iran’s pathways to
nuclear weapons. This includes ensuring that Tehran cannot acquire the
weapons-grade plutonium for nuclear weapons.

Under the basic terms of the April 2 framework that negotiators are
finalizing, the final comprehensive nuclear deal will block Iran's
pathway to nuclear weapons using separated plutonium, indefinitely.

Under the agreed upon terms, Iran will modify the heavy-water reactor
under construction at Arak and destroy or ship out the original core.
Construction of the reactor was halted under the November 2013 interim
deal, but if completed as designed, the core would produce enough
weapons-grade plutonium for about two nuclear weapons on an annual
basis. If Iran were to build a reprocessing facility, the
weapons-grade plutonium could then be separated from the spent fuel
and used for a bomb. However, under the agreement, Iran has committed
indefinitely not to conduct reprocessing or reprocessing research and
development on spent nuclear fuel.

In addition to redesigning the reactor so that it will not produce
weapons-grade plutonium, Iran will ship the spent fuel out of the
country.

The heavy-water production plant will continue to operate, but Iran
will not accumulate excess heavy water, which is used to moderate some
types of reactors, like the one under construction at the Arak site.
Excess heavy water will be sold on the international market. Under the
terms of the framework outlined April 2, Iran will also not construct
any new heavy-water reactors for at least 15 years.

Taken together, these provisions provide a strong guarantee Iran's
plutonium pathway to nuclear weapons is verifiably and indefinitely
blocked.


** Solving the Long-Term Enrichment Question
------------------------------------------------------------

A group of professors from Princeton University, Alexander Glasser,
Zia Mian, and Frank von Hippel, published an article
(http://armscontrol.us10.list-manage.com/track/click?u=94d82a9d1fc1a60f0138613f1&id=5e30894ad9&e=2321be7db0)
in Science offering a possible long-term solution to mitigate concerns
about uranium enrichment in Iran.

The authors point out that,

When restrictions expire, Iran will continue to be bound by the NPT
and subject to IAEA inspection of its nuclear program, including the
extra transparency measures and access provided by the additional
protocol. Despite this transparency, there will remain concerns in the
West and among Iran's major competitors for influence in the Middle
East about the nuclear-weapon option implicit in Iran's enrichment
program.

The authors suggest multi-nationalizing enrichment and allowing other
countries in the region to buy-in to Iran’s enrichment process.
Countries that buy in would have access to Iran’s uranium-enrichment
facility without raising additional proliferation concerns. Further
transparency measures, such as those employed by Brazil and Argentina
to check each other’s nuclear programs could also be instituted. The
authors argue that this could remove the threat posed by enrichment in
the long run. It could also be “an important step toward a
long-hoped-for nuclear weapon–free zone in the Middle East.”

The authors conclude that, in addition to a deal, “working on
multinational enrichment arrangements for the Middle East, and
ultimately around the world, Iran and the E3+3 could chart a path to
reduce the proliferation risks from national control of civilian
enrichment plants, regardless of location.”


** A Flawed Critique of Breakout Time
------------------------------------------------------------

A wide range of scientific and technical experts agree that the
combination of limits on Iran’s uranium-enrichment capacity that were
agreed to on April 2 in Lausanne, would increase the time it would
take Iran to amass enough highly-enriched uranium for one bomb from
the current timeframe of 2-3 months to at least 12 months, if such an
effort were not detected sooner, which would very likely happen if
Iran tried to make dash for the bomb.

These experts include the technical teams of the P5+1 countries, top
experts from the U.S. national laboratories, a group of more than 30
nonproliferation experts
(http://armscontrol.us10.list-manage.com/track/click?u=94d82a9d1fc1a60f0138613f1&id=ce378211db&e=2321be7db0)
, as well as other knowledgeable skeptics, including David Albright of
the Institute for Science and International Security, who wrote on
April 11 that “our estimate of breakout would confirm the United
States’ assessment that these limitations satisfy a 12 month breakout
criterion.”

However, in an op-ed in today’s edition of The New York Times, Alan
Kuperman makes a number of flawed assumptions and charges that the
agreement would only increase the so-called breakout time by one
month.

Among the errors in his piece:
* He assumes that Iran could immediately re-assemble, re-install,
re-calibrate and begin to operate the 14,000 centrifuges the agreement
will require Iran to disconnect and remove and put under IAEA seal.
Such an assumption ignores the fact that it would take many months, if
not years, to achieve such a stunt, which would be detected and could
be disrupted within days of any such effort.
* He assumes that the agreement would allow Iran to keep large amounts
of current low-enriched uranium (LEU) stockpile in solid form (oxide
powder instead of gas), which is entirely incorrect. Under the
agreement, Iran must verifiably reduce its current stockpile of some
7,600kg of LEU gas to no more than 300kg of LEU in any form.
* Kuperman repeats an old line from Iran’s Supreme Leader that he
wants more than 100,000 centrifuges. That statement was made many
months ago to describe the uranium-enrichment capacity Iran would need
to power its one operating light-water reactor at Bushehr—and to try
to gain bargaining leverage in the talks. Since then, Russia, which
supplies the fuel for the reactor, has extended further fuel supply
assurances for Bushehr, obviating any such “need” for Iranian
enrichment capacity of that scale. Iran has also agreed to limits on
its enrichment capacity that make the achievement of such capacity out
of reach for well over a decade.

Without the limits that can be established under the P5+1 and Iran
deal, Iran’s uranium enrichment capacity would be unlimited.
http://armscontrol.us10.list-manage1.com/track/click?u=94d82a9d1fc1a60f0138613f1&id=4550457e5f&e=2321be7db0

A comprehensive nuclear deal between the P5+1 and Iran would block the
Tehran’s plutonium path to the bomb, significantly cut the LEU
available for further enrichment, slash the number of centrifuges
available to enrich uranium to less than 5,060, retire the remaining
14,000 installed centrifuges, limit research and development on
advanced machines, and put in place a multilayered international
monitoring regime to detect and deter noncompliance for well over a
decade with many limitations lasting indefinitely. Iran’s potential
“breakout time” would expand to over 12 months.
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** Looking Ahead ...
------------------------------------------------------------

June 25: Senate Foreign Relations Committee Hearing, “Evaluating Key
Components of a Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action with Iran.”
Witnesses, David Albright, Institute for Science and International
Security; Ray Takeyh, Council on Foreign Relations; Jim Walsh, MIT.
Dirksen Senate office building, 419, 10:00 am.

June 25:“Rouhani at Two Years: An Assessment on the Cusp of a Nuclear
Deal,” with Robin Wright, United States Institute for Peace-Wilson
Center; Suzanne Maloney, Brookings; and Karim Sadjadpour, Carnegie
Endowment at the Woodrow Wilson Center, 12:00-1:00PM. For more
information, click here
(http://armscontrol.us10.list-manage2.com/track/click?u=94d82a9d1fc1a60f0138613f1&id=287e3e91bf&e=2321be7db0)
.

June 30: Target date for a comprehensive deal.

July 16: Hold the date - Arms Control Association event on the outcome
of the negotiations between the P5+1 and Iran and elements of a final,
comprehensive nuclear deal. Speakers will include Richard Nephew,
program director of Economic Statecraft, Sanctions and Energy Markets
and former principal deputy coordinator for sanctions policy at the
U.S. State Department (invited); Ilan Goldenberg, senior fellow and
director of the Middle East Security Program at the Center for a New
American Security and Kelsey Davenport, director for nonproliferation
policy. Location: Carnegie Endowment for International Peace,
Washington, D.C.

============================================================
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