25 Apr 2024
No significant news came out of Sundays nuclear talks between Irans Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif and US Secretary of State John Kerry in Geneva.

Instead, the Supreme Leaders top aide, Ali Akbar Velayati,filled the voidwith a harsh statement about the US:
Undoubtedly, the Islamic Republic of Iran favors negotiations and it has announced its readiness for negotiations since the very first day that the issue of Irans nuclear program was raised and has never avoided negotiation.

But, it is wrong for the US to imagine and launch propaganda about the talks in a way as if the negotiations were an advantage that it is giving to Iran. It is them who need the negotiations.
Velayatis comments, after a meeting with the UN Special Representative for Afghanistan, were another sign that any deal must be seen as one in which the Islamic Republic did not capitulate to US pressure and sanctions.

On Saturday, Kerry said President Obama was fully prepared to stop these talks if he feels that theyre not being met with the kind of productive decision-making necessary to prove that a program is in fact peaceful.

A member of the Iranian negotiating team in Geneva said, Such comments are normal and natural, only to be upstaged by Velayatis intervention.

In Geneva, Zarif and Kerry sat down after two days of preparatory talks between their deputies and lead negotiators, as well as technical discussions.

Left to right: Head of Iran Atomic Energy Organization, Ali Akbar Salehi; Zarif; Kerry; lead US technical negotiator, Ernest Moniz

SALEHI ZARIF KERRY MONIZ 02-15

With few details offered, the signs have not been hopeful. Kerry said on Saturday that significant gaps remained between Iran and the 5+1 Powers (US, Britain, China, Russia, France, and Germany). Zarif repeated the Supreme Leaders rejection of a US-proposed two-stage process with an agreement on General Principles by March 31 and a comprehensive deal by a July 1 deadline and insisted on a full and final resolution.

A leak from unnamed Western diplomats and senior Israeli officials indicated that the 5+1 Powers were standing on demands for a reduction in Irans capacity for uranium enrichment, shipment of almost all low-enriched uranium outside the country, and a lengthy process for the removal of US-led sanctions.

Despite the lack of apparent advance, Irans lead negotiator, Deputy Foreign Minister Abbas Araqchi, said conditions were still good for negotiations:

Laura Rozen@lrozen


Asked iran state media what araghchi said, talks were positive, tough, intensive, atmosphere positive. They said, yes, exactly.



2:36 AM - 23 Feb 2015

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Discussions resume on Monday, with Kerry expected to leave Geneva in the evening.



Tehran Denounces Turkish Military Intervention in Syria
Deputy Foreign Hossein Amir-Abdollahianhas denouncedTurkeys weekend military intervention in Syria, moving the tomb of the grandfather of the Ottoman Empire.

Ankara sent in 39 tanks, 57 armored vehicles, and almost 600 troops to shift the tomb of Suleyman Shah, which has been besieged since last March by the Islamic State, closer to the Turkish border.

The military operation of a neighboring country (Turkey) in Syria has no justification, Amir Abdollahian said. The military intervention of the neighboring countries in Syria will make the situation more complicated and it has no consequence other than making the region more insecure.

The Deputy Foreign Minister repeated Irans allegations of Turkish support of terrorist groups in Syrias four-year conflict.

The statement echoed the Assad regimes criticism of the intervention, saying it went beyond Ankaras cooperation with the Islamic State, the Islamist faction Jabhat al-Nusra, and rebel groups.

By EA WorldView
https://theiranproject.com/vdcg3x9qyak9nt4.5jra.html
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