25 Apr 2024
Friday 15 November 2013 - 12:28
Story Code : 64409

French sabotage on Iran

French sabotage on Iran
It remains to be seen whether President Obamas phone call to French President Hollande yesterday will fix the glitch in the talks between Iran and the P5+1 world powers, talks that were sabotaged by French perfidy last weekor, in the opinion of Israel, hawks and neoconservatives, by French heroism.
After returning to Tehran after the talks, Irans Foreign Minister Javad Zarif bluntly blamed the French for wrecking the talks. What happened, it seems, is that an American draft of an accord was dismantled by the French, who opposed it and forced a rewrite, surprising Iran (and, apparently, the United States as well). So the Iranians had to back off the accord and return home for consultations before resuming talks on November 20. Tweeted Zarif:
No amount of spinning can change what happened within 5+1 in Geneva from 6PM Thursday to 545 PM Saturday.But it can further erode confidence

Javad Zarif (@JZarif) November 11, 2013
Mr.Secretary, was it Iran that gutted over half of US draft Thursday night? and publicly commented against it Friday morning?

No, it was France.

Zarif was contradicting Secretary of State Kerry, who after the talks ended said that the P5+1, including the United States and France, were in agreement and that it was Iran who scuttled the negotiations.

Russias Foreign Minister, Sergei Lavrov, doesnt agree, and his account tallies with Zarifs. Reports the Associated Press:
Russias foreign minister says Iran had accepted a U.S.-draft proposal on a nuclear deal, but last-minute amendments blocked an accord last week in Geneva. Sergey Lavrovs account fits with comments from Iran and world powers. But it offers additional insights into how Washington apparently led the negotiations seeking to ease Western concerns that Iran could one day produce nuclear weaponsa charge Iran denies. Lavrov did not mention which country offered the 11th hour amendments. Others, however, say France raised concerns over issues such as a planned heavy water rector that produces more byproduct plutonium.
Still, RT.com reports, Lavrov is optimistic.

What happened during the phone call between Obama and Hollande isnt known. Its a curious failure of American diplomacy for the United States to have gone into last weeks talks without all of its ducks in a row, those ducks being the UK, Germany and France. Did Kerry not know of the impending French wrecking ball? In any case, after their call, according to AFP, Obama and Hollande were back on the same page, publicly at least, speaking of a unified proposal and saying that now its all up to Iran:
Hollande and Obama confirmed their full support for the text agreed by the P5+1 group of world powers at this weekends talks, which they said forms the basis for a serious, solid and credible agreement.

Now it is up to Iran to give a positive answer, the statement said.
By all accounts, Obama and his team are committed to a positive result from the talks in Geneva. Theyve pushed hard to get the Senate to hold off on new Iran sanctions, and theyve told Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu to shut up, essentially. Lets hope that Obama convinced Hollande that a deal is in the works, and that the United States wont stand for any more interference by the French.

By The Nation

 

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