Diplomats say Iran deal announcement planned tomorrow

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Diplomats say Iran deal announcement planned tomorrow
John Kerry and US Under Secretary for Political Affairs Wendy Sherman, centre, meet with foreign ministers and representatives of Germany, France, China, Britain, Russia and the European Union during the current round of nuclear talks with Iran

Final details of the pact were still being worked out and a formal agreement still awaits a review from the capitals of the seven nations at the talks.

By AP

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Published: Sun 12 Jul 2015, 6:36 PM

Last updated: Sun 9 Aug 2015, 12:55 PM

Vienna - Negotiators at the Iran nuclear talks plan to announce on Monday that they have reached agreement on a historic deal capping nearly a decade of diplomacy that would curb the country's atomic programme in return for sanctions relief, diplomats said on Sunday.
The two diplomats said that a provisional agreement may be reached even earlier - by late Sunday. But they cautioned that final details of the pact were still being worked out and a formal agreement still awaits a review from the capitals of the seven nations at the talks.
And senior US and Iranian officials suggested that not enough time was left to reach a provisional deal by Sunday. All of the officials, who are at the talks, demanded anonymity because they weren't authorised to discuss the negotiations publicly.
"We are working hard, but a deal tonight is simply logistically impossible," the Iranian official said, noting that the agreement will run roughly 100 pages.
The senior US official declined to speculate as to the timing of any agreement or announcement and noted that "major issues remain to be resolved in these talks."
Movement toward a deal has been marked by years of tough negotiations. The current round in Vienna has run more than two weeks and blown through three deadlines.
Even before the envoys spoke, the nuclear negotiations appeared on the way to an agreement.
US Secretary of State John Kerry, who on Thursday had threatened to walk away from the negotiations, noted on Sunday that "a few tough things" remain in the way but added "we're getting to some real decisions."
En route to Mass at Vienna's gothic St. Stephens Cathedral, Kerry said twice he was "hopeful" after a "very good meeting" on Saturday with Iranian Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif.
French Foreign Minister Laurent Fabius also was cautiously optimistic, telling reporters on Sunday: "I hope that we are finally entering the last phase of this negotiation."
The pact is meant to impose long-term, verifiable limits on nuclear programmes that Tehran could modify to produce weapons. Iran, in return, would get tens of billions of dollars in sanctions relief.
The current round of nuclear talks is now in its 16th day and has been extended three times since the first deadline of March 31 was missed. The mood among negotiators had turned more somber each time a new target date was set.
As the weekend approached, Kerry declared the talks couldn't go on indefinitely and warned that the US could walk away from the negotiations.
But in another sign that a deal could soon be sealed, Russian news agencies reported that Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov planned to arrive in Vienna on Sunday evening.
Most other foreign ministers of the six nations negotiating with Iran already are in the Austrian capital and in position to join Kerry and Zarif for any announcement of an agreement.
Diplomats familiar with the talks said most of the nuts and bolts of implementing the deal have been agreed upon. But over the past week, issues that were previously on the back burner have led to new disputes. Among them is Iran's demand for a lifting of a UN arms embargo and its insistence that any UN Security Council resolution approving the deal be written in a way that stops describing its nuclear activities as illegal.
A diplomat familiar with the negotiations said disagreements also persist on how long some of the restrictions on imports of nuclear technology and other embargos outlined in any new Security Council resolution will last. The diplomat said restrictions will last for years, not months.
Despite Kerry's relatively upbeat take, comments by Iran's supreme leader suggested that Tehran's mistrust of Washington would persist no matter what the outcome of the talks.
Iran's state-run Press TV cited Ayatollah Ali Khamenei on Saturday as calling the US an "excellent example of arrogance."
Even if Khamenei isn't signalling that the talks have failed, his comments appeared to be a blow to US hopes that an agreement will lead to improved bilateral relations that could translate into increased cooperation in a common cause- the fight against Daesh militants.
Zarif had hinted at just that last week, suggesting a deal acceptable to his country will open the door to joint efforts on that front.
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, a fierce opponent of what he considers a deal that is too lenient on Tehran, said Khamenei's comments showed that Western powers are "caving" in to Iran even as the Islamic republic keeps railing against them.


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