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Top US, Iranian diplomats focus on clinching nuclear deal
US Secretary of State John Kerry has also arrived in the Austrian capital, where he is holding talks with Zarif and America’s European Union partners who worked on the Iran deal, US officials said.
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US Secretary of State John Kerry arrived in Vienna on Saturday as Iran and Western powers finalised arrangements for the lifting of sanctions against Tehran under a landmark nuclear deal clinched a year ago. Many of these officials expressed concerns about an emboldened Iran.
In exchange for dramatically scaling back key areas of its nuclear activities, Iran will be relieved of crippling economic sanctions against the country, particularly on oil exports.
“Immediately after the release of the report by the IAEA verifying Iran’s implementation, we will have the Implementation Day”.
White House spokesman Josh Earnest said Friday the United States is aware that Iran has made important progress in fulfilling commitments in the agreement, but that Iran will not receive any sanctions relief until the IAEA confirms commitments and compliance. The agreement puts Iran’s various nuclear activities under IAEA watch for up to 15 years, with an option to re-impose sanctions should Tehran break its commitments.
International sanctions on Iran will be lifted when the International Atomic Energy Agency issues its final report on Tehran’s disputed nuclear program, Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif has been quoted as saying.
The report from the IAEA is expected to be released later on Saturday and could herald a new dawn for Iran’s economy.
It is a defining initiative for both U.S. President Barack Obama and Iran’s President Hassan Rouhani, both of whom faced strong opposition from hardliners at home in countries that have called each other “Great Satan” and part of the “axis of evil”.
Iran’s diplomatic skills have definitely improved in the context of its dealings with the West, but have significantly deteriorated in its regional relationships.
If Iran was bold enough to conduct illegal missile tests, fire rockets near our ships, and seize two American boats and hold our sailors at gunpoint, how bold do you think they’re going to be once they get their hands on $100 billion? But this month’s milestone will mean Iran will be able to sell its oil again on world markets and its banks will be able to connect to the global system.
He has argued, including in a New York Times op-ed column last week, that Iran wants to help the global fight against Sunni Muslim militants spurred on, Iran says, by Saudi Arabia.
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The reactor core was capable of producing plutonium and its fate was a major point of disagreement during the negotiations between six leading world powers and Iran.