World powers, Iran
clinch 'historic' nuclear deal
By Simon Sturdee and Nicolas Revise 1 hour ago
- Iran
nuclear deal proves elusive AFP
- Israel
slams 'bad' deal between Iran, world powers AFP
- Iran
nuclear deal 'on the table, can be done': Britain AFP
- Iran
says next nuclear talks will be 'difficult' AFP
- Gaps
seen narrowing despite Iran nuclear deal failure AFP
Iran agreed to curb its nuclear programme for the next
six months in exchange for limited sanctions relief, in a preliminary accord
meant to lay the foundations for a comprehensive agreement later this year.
The deal was reached in marathon talks in Geneva that ended Sunday
before dawn after long tractions between Iran and the five permanent members of
the UN Security Council plus Germany.
Tehran's arch-foe Israel slammed the deal as a "historic
mistake" that left open the capability for the Islamic republic to develop
a nuclear arsenal.
But the six powers involved hailed it as a key first step that for
now warded off the prospect of military escalation -- a geopolitical
breakthrough that would have been unthinkable only months ago.
"Today, the United States together with our close allies and
partners took an important first step toward a comprehensive solution that
addresses our concerns with the Islamic Republic of Iran's nuclear
programme," US President Barack Obama said in Washington.
UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon said the deal "could turn
out to be the beginnings of a historic agreement" for the Middle East.
Tehran boasted at home that the accord recognised its
"right" to enrich uranium -- which it says is for peaceful purposes
-- but Western leaders said the deal made no such reference.
Under the deal, Tehran will limit uranium enrichment -- the area
that raises most suspicions over Iran's alleged nuclear weapons drive -- to low
levels that can only be used for civilian energy purposes.
It will neutralise its stockpile of uranium enriched to higher
20-percent purity -- very close to weapons-grade -- within six months, US
Secretary of State John Kerry said in Geneva after clinching the deal.
Iran will not add to its stockpile of low-enriched uranium, nor
install more centrifuges or commission the Arak heavy-water reactor, which
could produce plutonium fissile material.
U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry (L) laughs with Russia's
Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov during a …
UN atomic inspectors will also have additional,
"unprecedented" access, Kerry said, including daily site inspections
at the two enrichment facilities of Fordo and Natanz.
In exchange, the Islamic republic will receive some $7 billion
(5.2 billion euros) in sanctions relief and the powers promised to impose no
new embargo measures for six months if Tehran sticks to the accord.
But the vast raft of international sanctions that have badly
hobbled the Iranian economy remain untouched.
The interim sanctions relief was "limited, temporary,
targeted, and reversible," the White House said, stressing that "the
vast bulk of our sanctions, including the oil, finance, and banking sanctions
architecture" will stay in place.
Right to uranium enrichment?
Hassan Rouhani, whose election as Iran's president in June raised
hopes of a thaw with the West, insisted "Iran's right to uranium
enrichment on its soil was accepted in this nuclear deal by world powers".
But Kerry was adamant: "This first step does not say that
Iran has the right of enrichment, no matter what interpretative comments are
made."
British Foreign Secretary William Hague told the BBC that only a
final, comprehensive accord -- if reached -- would grant Iran a
"right" to peaceful nuclear energy.
"The (interim deal) document does not resolve the argument
about whether there is such a thing as the right to enrich," Hague told
the BBC.
Russia said it was a win-win deal, while Iran's other ally China
said the document would support stability in the Middle East.
But President Vladimir Putin also echoed Obama's note of caution:
tougher battles surely lie ahead.
"A breakthrough step has been made, but only the first on a
long and difficult path."
France called Sunday's deal "an important step in the right
direction."
The next six months will see Iran and the United States, China,
Russia, France, Britain and Germany negotiating the more comprehensive deal.
Joel Rubin, director of policy for the foundation Ploughshares
Fund, warned the hardest work may still lie ahead.
"This is going to challenge all of the feelings, and
conceptions and ideologies and emotions that have been pent up in the US, in
the West and in Israel and elsewhere for decades. It's going to be a very, very
hard task," he said.
Sanctions have 'begun to crack'
The deal was reached at the third round of talks between the P5+1
and Iran since Rouhani replaced the more hawkish Mahmoud Ahmadinejad in August.
Much of the groundwork was apparently made in secret US-Iran
bilateral meetings over past months, according to a report by the Al-Monitor
news website.
Iranians, many of whom see the nuclear programme as a source of
national pride, are impatient to see a lifting of sanctions that have more than
halved Iran's vital oil exports since mid-2012.
"The structure of the sanctions against Iran has begun to
crack," Rouhani claimed after the signing Sunday.
Supreme leader Ali Ayatollah Khamenei, who last week described
Israel as a doomed "rabid dog", hailed the deal as an
"achievement".
For ordinary Iranians, news of the breakthrough was a moment of
unbridled joy, with expectations that lives made miserable by sanctions would
get better.
Their weakened money, the rial, strengthened Sunday after the
deal, and a sense of relief flowed through Iranian streets and internet social
networks.
"I am not opposed to the enrichment right. But I am entitled
to other rights as well: the right to have a job, to see the development of my
country," wrote one Iranian internet user, Saghar.
Israel, though, virulently criticised the agreement, with Prime
Minister Benjamin Netanyahu telling his cabinet that "what was achieved...
in Geneva is not a historic agreement but rather a historic mistake".
Many in Israel believe Iran's only goal is to develop a nuclear
arsenal with which to threaten their country, and want the Islamic republic's
nuclear facilities dismantled for good.
Kerry said the deal extends the "breakout" time needed
by Iran to develop nuclear weapons and thus "will make our partners in the
region safer. It will make our ally Israel safer."
Many hardliners in the United States charged that Obama was being
too soft on Iran.
Hawkish US lawmakers said they wanted to up the pressure on Iran
to force it to go beyond the hard-won deal and start dismantling existing
nuclear infrastructure.
One, Republican Senator Mark Kirk, said he would help craft new
sanctions legislation "if Iran undermines this interim accord or if the
dismantlement of Iran's nuclear infrastructure is not underway by the end of
this six-month period".
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Use your masterful powers
of thought,
visualization and verbal intent to
Co-create a peaceful world now...
visualization and verbal intent to
Co-create a peaceful world now...
2 comments:
There is not going to be any peace.
There is no money to be made with peace.
FYI - THE WAR MACHINE IS OVER...
THERE IS NO NEED FOR WAR.
PEACE WILL EXIST ON THIS PLANET - AND MOTHER EARTH
WILL AGAIN BECOME A BEAUTIFUL PLACE TO LIVE.
THANK YOU OUR CREATOR -- THANK YOU ST. GERMAINE -
THANK YOU OUR STAR BROTHERS AND SISTERS -
THANK YOU OUR AGARTHAN AND HOLLOW EARTH MASTERS
THANK YOU
THANK YOU
THANK YOU
GREAT DAYS ARE AHEAD FOR MANKIND.
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