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Iran expects end to nuclear talks in a year

Published: 22 Oct 2013 - 04:35 am | Last Updated: 31 Jan 2022 - 05:48 am

DUBAI: Iran believes it can wrap up negotiations with world powers over its disputed nuclear programme in one year or less, Iranian media quoted its chief nuclear negotiator as saying.

At talks last week, the first since moderate President Hassan Rowhani’s election in June, Tehran offered a three-phase plan it said could yield a breakthrough in the stand-off after years of diplomatic paralysis and increasing confrontation.

“If we see the same seriousness in future negotiations which we saw in the (October 15-16) Geneva negotiations, we believe that within six months to one year we can conclude the negotiations,”  Deputy Foreign Minister Abbas Araqchi said in an interview with the state-owned, Arabic-language Al Alam television channel. “Perhaps within three months or six months we can reach a conclusion regarding the first step,” he said, in remarks that were published yesterday by ISNA news agency.

The United States and its European allies suspect Iran is working towards a nuclear weapons capability, and have levied sanctions on Iran’s energy, banking and shipping sectors that have battered the Iranian economy and caused a currency crisis.

Iran denies it is after nuclear weapons, saying its uranium enrichment programme is purely for peaceful energy purposes.

The six world powers dealing with the Iranian nuclear issue are the five permanent UN Security Council members — the United States, Russia, China, Britain and France - plus Germany.

Washington described last week’s negotiations as the most serious and candid to date, and the parties have agreed to meet again in Geneva on November 7-8. Nuclear and sanctions experts from both sides are to meet before the next main round of talks.

But all sides have stressed that wide differences must still be overcome to nail down a deal.

“Certainly there are serious differences between us and the other side,” Araqchi said, according to ISNA. “We even have deep disagreements with each other. Despite this, we are hopeful we can achieve a common resolution to this dispute.”

Araqchi reiterated that Iran would not stop refining uranium, saying domestic enrichment was a right of the Iranian people - but that the extent of enrichment was negotiable.

AFP