Iran insists the final document of the P5+1 negotiation in Vienna must be announced in the presence of the Russian foreign minister. Meanwhile the US president reassures colleagues he “wouldn’t agree to something he thought was weak or unenforceable.”
As the negotiating parties seek to conclude the long-awaited
deal, Iran and the US seems to have made up their minds on how to
treat the ongoing talks.
“For us it will be appropriate if Mr. [Sergey] Lavrov will be
here for a deal. And I think for him it is important to be here
when the deal is done, if it is done,” a senior Iranian
diplomat told Sputnik.
Lavrov, who is currently attending the BRICS summit in Ufa,
Russia, said that universal agreement on the Iranian nuclear
issue is within a reach and the sides are just a step away from
making a deal. The ending of nuclear talks in Vienna will open
road to lifting sanctions against Iran, he said.
Iranian President Hassan Rouhani also showed optimism that an
agreement could soon be reached.
READ MORE: America still Iran’s enemy, nuclear deal or
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“Negotiations with the P5+1 group are at a sensitive stage
and the Islamic republic of Iran is preparing for [the period of]
post-negotiations and post-sanctions,” he said. Updating
Iranians on the progress of talks, the chief Iranian negotiator
Abbas Araqchi told the people that there was a consensus on
lifting the sanctions.
“We have reached a consensus for the removal of financial and
economic sanctions on the day of implementing the deal,”
Araqchi was quoted by state IRIB TV as saying. “The
discussions are at very sensitive stage. We are trying to reduce
the differences for a deal,” he added, Xinhua cites
The Americans show certain restraint. According to Senator Chris
Murphy cited by POLITICO, President Barack Obama said that he
“wanted to make it clear to us that if it’s a bad deal,
there’s no deal.”
READ MORE: Kerry on Iran talks: There are
‘difficult issues,’ US is prepared to walk away
At the same time “He [Obama] said, ‘Don’t get nervous, don’t
get concerned about statements by the supreme leader, about
statements in the press. I am not going to sign a deal where we
can’t assure that we’ve blocked all pathways to a bomb for
Iran,” Senator Chris Coons said Tuesday night.
The Obama administration is doing its best to dismiss suggestions
that the president might sign any deal just for the sake of a
legacy, first disregarding the July 7 deadline and now
downplaying the self-imposed deadline of July 9, despite the fact
that if the deal is not reached by midnight Thursday, the US
Congress will have 60 days, instead of just 30, to consider the
pact, according to POLITICO.
READ MORE:
No artificial deadlines in nuclear deal negotiations with Iran –
Lavrov
Attending a working cocktail party in the State Dining Room
Tuesday night, Obama appeared “not at all” concerned
about the possible implications of the deal, reports POLITICO.
“He said the chances, he thought, were less than 50-50 at
this point and that he wouldn’t agree to something he thought was
weak or unenforceable,” Senator Dick Durbin told POLITICO on
Wednesday.
According to diplomatic sources, Iran and the six world powers –
comprising Russia, the United States, China, France, the United
Kingdom and Germany – are working nonstop, and a deal might be
sealed by Thursday.