Zarif Upbeat on Eve of Iran Nuclear Deal Implementation

إقرأ هذا الخبر بالعربية W460

Iran's Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif said Sunday he was hopeful the implementation of a landmark deal with world powers would lead to a lasting agreement over Iran's nuclear drive.

The deal clinched in Geneva in November and finalized last week is to go into effect on Monday and puts temporary curbs on Iran's nuclear activities in exchange for modest sanctions relief.

"I hope the implementation of the first phase of the Geneva (Joint) Plan of Action -- that will begin tomorrow -- will bring positive results for the country, as well as regional and global peace and security," Zarif said in remarks posted on his Facebook page.

"And that it will pave the ground for substantial negotiations for the final solution," he said about talks with the United States, Britain, France, China, Russia and Germany which are known as the P5+1.

Clinched after years of tough negotiations, the accord will last for six months and gives Iran access to nearly $4.2 billion of frozen assets in return for Tehran limiting its enrichment of uranium to five percent.

Iran must also begin to neutralize its stockpile of uranium purified to 20 percent, a few technical steps short of weapons-grade.

Both measures are to be monitored and verified by the inspectors from the U.N. atomic agency IAEA, who are presently in Iran.

The deal is also expected to open a diplomatic window for intensive negotiations between Iran and the P5+1 to find a lasting solution to Iran's nuclear drive.

Western governments suspect Iran's civil nuclear program masks a drive for a weapons capability, something Tehran strongly denies.

President Hassan Rouhani has said that clinching a comprehensive agreement would be a "very difficult task", as key issues are yet to be broached while there is mounting criticism of the interim deal in the U.S. Congress and among Iranian hardliners.

The government has hailed the interim deal as a breakthrough that brings down "one or two pillars" of a harsh, internationally-imposed sanctions regime badly hurting its economy.

Comments 1
Default-user-icon Icansee4miles (Guest) 19 January 2014, 15:46

This guy just left a wreath on the grave of the Hezbollah leader that was responsible for the suicide truck bombing resulting in the death of 242 Marines in Lebanon. And the West is negotiating a nuclear treaty with him? The Bahrain Protocol, Amazon Kindle's new thriller spells out the frightening truth in a gripping novel about the U.S.' withdrawal from the Middle East; and if the U.S. won't stop Iran, Israel will-with a surprising new partner, Saudi Arabia.