Author Topic: Powers blow past deadline with Iran in nuclear negotiations  (Read 316 times)

0 Members and 1 Guest are viewing this topic.

Offline flowers

  • Hero Member
  • *****
  • Posts: 18,798


http://www.jpost.com/Middle-East/Powers-blow-past-deadline-with-Iran-in-nuclear-negotiations-395761

Quote
LAUSANNE, Switzerland -- Sunset fell on a deadline with Iran over its nuclear program with no agreement among diplomats gathered here in the Swiss Alps, working through the night unclear on the path forward.

US negotiators said they would continue sleeplessly into the morning hours in order to hammer out a political framework with Iran, which they hope will address all major elements of a comprehensive accord ending concerns with Iran's decades-old nuclear program.

The deadline for a far-reaching deal is June 30. But the Obama administration is willing to walk away from the talks before then, White House press secretary Josh Earnest told reporters in Washington, if Iran is not prepared to make the necessary political decisions in the hours to come.

"If we have made progress toward the finish line," Earnest added, "then we should keep going."

Tea leaves early in the day of their deadline, March 31, suggested talks may continue past midnight. Germany's Foreign Minister Frank-Walter Steinmeier began telling local press that the talks were in "a bit of a crisis." He did not elaborate.

Early in the afternoon, US officials began suggesting the talks may continue into April 1 "if it's useful to do so." They committed for the night later on, as planes sat idle on Geneva runways for the American and Chinese delegations.

And as the clock struck 9 p.m. in Lausanne, where the effort continued for a fifth day, envoys appeared weary in the halls of the Beau Rivage Palace. European High Representative Federica Mogherini rubbed tired eyes; US Secretary of State John Kerry told journalists, "we're working hard," off for short respite at a restaurant in the hotel.

‎"We've made enough progress in the last days to merit staying until Wednesday," State Department Acting Spokesperson Marie Harf said as the night dwindled without a deal. "There are several difficult issues still remaining."‎

Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi took his flight as scheduled and left the talks on Tuesday night, leaving his deputy to continue in his place, as French Foreign Minister Laurent Fabius described the negotiations as complicated, long and difficult.

"I fear that we will spend the night," Fabius told reporters here.

"The mood is back and forth— a difficult struggle for a realistic solution that is acceptable to both sides," one German delegate said. "It remains an open question whether we will succeed."

Obama administration officials said leading up to the deadline that, without agreement, Washington would have to reassess the path forward. This week was "time to make hard decisions," Kerry told the press last week, entering the latest round of a two-year negotiation.

The US, Britain, France, China, Russia and Germany seek to cap, restrict, monitor and partially roll back Iran's nuclear program for a finite period.

But gaps remain on some of the largest issues in reaching an understanding on how to get there.

Protecting its veto influence at the United Nations, Russia is fighting a US-designed mechanism with which the UN Security Council could "snap back" sanctions on Iran after voting for their repeal, without going through the process of a second vote. Moscow warns that such a mechanism undermines the authority of the c