Thursday, 2 April 2015

Obama: Iran accord will make the world safer


President Obama praised an "historic understanding" with with Iran on Thursday, saying that a new deal paves the way for a final agreement in three months to prevent Tehran from making nuclear weapons.
"If this framework leads to a final, comprehensive deal, it will make our country, our allies, and our world safer," Obama said at the White House.


Obama spoke after a formal announcement by negotiators in Switzerland that the United States, allies, and Iran have a general agreement, with details to be negotiated between now and June 30.
The parties are negotiating an agreement in which the allies would lift sanctions off Iran if it gives up the means to make nuclear weapons. Among the issues: The pace at which sanctions might be eased, and exactly how to verify that Iran is honoring an agreement to shut off all avenues to nuclear weapons.
U.S. and Iranian officials said the parties have reached a political framework that will govern more technical talks in the coming months. The deadline for a final agreement is June 30.
Before the formal announcement, U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry called it a "big day," tweeting that the United States, its partners, and Iran "now have parameters to resolve major issues on nuclear program. Back to work soon on a final deal."

Iranian President Hassan Rouhani tweeted that "solutions on key parameters of Iran nuclear case reached. Drafting to start immediately, to finish by June 30th."
The parties had set a March 31 deadline for the political agreement, but extended it by two days.
The late March deadline was created in part as a response to threats from members of Congress to impose new sanctions on Iran. That move would gut the entire negotiations, Obama and aides said.
It is too early to tell how Thursday's announcement might affect a congressional move toward new sanctions on Iran.
Congressional Republicans and other critics have questioned whether Iran would honor any agreement depriving it of nuclear weapons
One of those critics, Israel Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, tweeted that "any deal must significantly roll back Iran's nuclear capabilities and stop its terrorism and aggression."
Last week, Obama told reporters he had "confidence that if there's an agreement, it's going to be a good agreement" for U.S. and regional security.
"And if it isn't, then there probably won't be an agreement," he said. "So there will be, I think, significant transparency in the whole process."

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