P5+1 and Iran Agree Landmark Nuclear
Deal at Geneva Talks
By Russia Today
The P5+1 world powers and Iran have struck
a historic deal on Tehran’s nuclear program at talks in Geneva on Sunday.
Ministers overcame the last remaining hurdles to reach agreement, despite
strong pressure from Israel and lobby groups.
Under the
interim agreement, Tehran will be allowed access to $4.2 billion in funds
frozen as part of the financial sanctions imposed on Iran over suspicions that
its nuclear program is aimed at producing an atomic bomb.
As part of the deal Iran has committed
to:
- Halt uranium enrichment to above 5 per cent.- Dismantle equipment required to enrich above 5 per cent.- Refrain from further enrichment of its 3.5 per cent stockpile.- Dilute its store of 20 per cent-enriched uranium.- Limit the use and installation of its centrifuges.- Cease construction on the Arak nuclear reactor.- Provide IAEA inspectors with daily access to the Natanz and Fordo sites.
Iran’s
foreign minister, Javad Zarif, called the deal a “major success” and said Tehran would expand its
cooperation with the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA).
While
Iranian President Hassan Rouhani announced that the deal reached in
Geneva shows that world powers have recognized Tehran’s “nuclear rights.”
“Constructive engagement [and] tireless efforts by negotiating teams are to open new horizons,” Rouhani said on Twitter shortly after the announcement.
In turn,
the IAEA said it is ready to check that Iran keeps its commitments under the
deal.
“With the agreement of the IAEA’s Board of Governors, the Agency will be ready to fulfill its role in verifying the implementation of nuclear related measures,” said Director General Yukiya Amano as cited by Reuters.
Foreign
ministers from the US, Russia, UK, France, China, Germany and the EU hailed the
deal as a step toward a “comprehensive solution” to
the nuclear standoff between Tehran and the West. The interim deal was reached
early Sunday morning in Geneva after some 18 hours of negotiation.
“While today’s announcement is just a first step, it achieves a great deal,”
US President Barack Obama said in
a statement at the White House.
“For the first time in nearly a decade, we have halted the progress of the Iranian nuclear program, and key parts of the program will be rolled back.”
However,
Obama said that if Iran fails to keep to its commitments over the next six
months, the US will“ratchet up” sanctions.
US Secretary of State John Kerry, a key participant in the Geneva talks, said
that Iran still had to prove it is not seeking to develop atomic weapons.
The Prime
Minister of the United Kingdom, David Cameron, has said that the negotiations
in Geneva were just an “important first step”.
“We have an international agreement with Iran that moves it further away from getting a nuclear weapon. We will continue to enforce sanctions robustly in order to secure a comprehensive and final settlement,” he added.
Tehran has
repeatedly denied that it is developing atomic weapons, however, and maintains
that its nuclear program is purely for civilian purposes.
Uranium enrichment
As part of
the agreement, the international community has accepted Tehran’s right to a
peaceful nuclear program. But after the deal was struck, participants in the
Geneva talks put different interpretations on the issue of Iran’s right to
enrich uranium.
Iran’s
Deputy Foreign Minister Seyed Abbas Araghchi wrote on Twitter that the right to
enrichment had been recognized in negotiations, and after the deal was clinched
Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov said the deal accepted Tehran’s right to
enrich uranium.
“This deal means that we agree with the need to recognize Iran’s right for peaceful nuclear energy, including the right for enrichment, with an understanding that those questions about the [Iranian nuclear program] that still remain, and the program itself, will be placed under the strictest IAEA control,” Lavrov told journalists.
John Kerry
had a different spin on the deal, however, telling the media that it did not
recognize Tehran’s right to enrich nuclear fuel.
“The first step, let me be clear, does not say that Iran has a right to enrich uranium,” Kerry said.
Israel has
already voiced its opposition to the deal with Iran, claiming it
is based on “Iranian deception and
self-delusion.” Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu condemned the
agreement as a “historic mistake” and
said the world had become a more dangerous place.
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