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Iran to resist 'excessive demands' over nuclear program

Nuclear Program Materials 18 November 2014 21:56 (UTC +04:00)
Iran said on Tuesday it would resist Western pressure to make what it considered to be excessive concessions over its nuclear program, highlighting obstacles that could prevent a historic deal being reached by a Nov. 24 deadline.
Iran to resist 'excessive demands' over nuclear program

Iran said on Tuesday it would resist Western pressure to make what it considered to be excessive concessions over its nuclear program, highlighting obstacles that could prevent a historic deal being reached by a Nov. 24 deadline, Reuters reported.

U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry declined to make any predictions for what he called a "critical week", during which negotiators from Iran and six world powers will push to end a 12-year dispute over Iran's nuclear activities and dispel fears of a new Middle East war.

After nearly a year of diplomacy, they aim to reach a comprehensive settlement at the talks in Vienna that would curb Iran's atomic activities in return for a phasing out of sanctions that have severely hurt its oil-dependent economy.

However, Iranian and Western officials have said next Monday's self-imposed deadline is unlikely to be met, and an extension is the most likely outcome. They say it is possible to agree the outline of a future accord, but it would take months to work out the details.

Iranian Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif met former European Union foreign policy chief Catherine Ashton, who is coordinating the negotiations, over lunch in the Austrian capital on Tuesday. It was unclear when the seven states involved would formally start the talks.

"This is a very critical week," Kerry said on a visit to London. "It's imperative, obviously, that Iran work with us in all possible efforts to prove to the world the (nuclear) program is peaceful."

His British counterpart, Foreign Secretary Philip Hammond, expressed cautious optimism. "I believe a deal can be done," he said after meeting Kerry. But, "Iran needs to show more flexibility if we are to succeed."

The outcome of the negotiations could have far-reaching implications in the wider Middle East as well as in the United States and Iran, where hardliners are skeptical of a rapprochement between the two arch foes.

The six states -- France, China, Russia, Germany, the United States and Britain -- want Iran to scale back its capacity to refine uranium so that it would take much longer to produce fissile material for a bomb if it wanted to.

Tehran says it is enriching uranium only to make fuel for nuclear power plants and that this is its sovereign right.

Iran's IRNA news agency quoted Zarif as saying after arriving in Vienna: "We are here to find a solution that respects the Iranian nation's rights and removes the legitimate concerns of the international community."

He suggested an agreement was possible "if there is a political will by the other party to resolve this issue" and made clear that Iran would be "resisting excessive demands".

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