Iran and
the United States are set to hold bilateral talks aimed at moving forward
efforts to reach a final nuclear deal. This comes six months after an interim
agreement was achieved.
Deutsche Welle, 8 June 2014
The talks,
to be held in Geneva on Monday and Tuesday, will precede by a week the next
round of negotiations between Iran and the so-called P5+1 group, made up of the
five permanent members of the United Nations Security Council, the US, Russia,
China, Britain and France plus Germany.
The aim of
the P+1 talks is to finalize an interim deal on Iran's controversial nuclear
program, which was reached last November. Under that deal, some penalties
imposed on Tehran over its nuclear program, which the US and its allies fear it
could be using to try to achieve a nuclear weapons capability, were eased. In
return, Iran agreed to accept curbs on its nuclear enrichment activities.
However,
the latest P5+1 talks in Vienna broke down last month, with the two sides
accusing each other of making unrealistic demands.
November's
breakthrough deal came after months of secret, informal talks between the Iran
and a US diplomatic team led by Deputy Secretary of State William Burns. He and
other members of that team are to be involved in this week's negotiations,
something that was welcomed by Iran's chief negotiator, Abbas Araqchi, who told
state television that he hoped Burns' role would be "as positive during
these negotiations."
The latest
diplomatic push to resolve the longstanding dispute comes just weeks before an
informal July 20 deadline to reach a comprehensive deal, something Araqi said
gave the bilateral meetings a greater sense of urgency.
'Serious
phase'
"We
have always had bilateral discussions with the United States in the margin of the
P5+1 group discussions, but since the talks have entered a serious phase, we
want to have separate consultations," Aracqi said.
The
Associated Press cited an unnamed US official who said Washington was currently
engaging "in as much active diplomacy as we can to test whether we can
reach a diplomatic solution with Iran on its nuclear program."
While this
week's talks are bilateral, the European Union's political director, Helga
Schmid, is to sit in on them.
Iranian
officials have said they are to hold talks with Russia later in the week and
that they were hoping to schedule bilateral meetings with the other P5+1
members.
The two
sides have been trying to resolve their differences over Tehran's nuclear
program for years, but the process only seemed to pick up momentum after the
election last summer of Iranian President Hassan Rouhani, who is seen as more
moderate than his predecessor.
pfd/ (AP, Reuters, AFP)

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