No nuclear deal between Iran and world powers is better than a “bad deal”, Britain’s foreign minister said Sunday as he arrived for talks just days before a deadline for an accord.
“We still have very big challenges if we are going to be able to get this deal done,” Philip Hammond told reporters in Vienna.
“I have said many times before and I will say it again today, no deal is better than a bad deal. There are red lines that we cannot cross and some very difficult decisions and tough choices are going to have to be made by all of us,” he said.
Hammond was due to join US Secretary of State John Kerry, Iranian Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif and their French, German and EU counterparts aiming to finalise a historic accord by Tuesday.
China and Russia, the other two countries in the six-country group, were represented by deputy foreign ministers.
Officials on both sides have said that the deadline may be missed, but only by a few days.
According to a framework deal agreed in April, Iran will sharply reduce its nuclear programme in scale and submit to tighter UN inspections in order to make any drive to make an atomic bomb virtually impossible.
In return Iran, which denies seeking the bomb, will see painful sanctions lifted. Tough remaining issues include the timing and pace of the sanctions relief and UN access to Iranian military bases.
LOTS OF WORK TO DO:
Talks between Iran and major powers on finalising a historic nuclear deal will go beyond the June 30 deadline, a spokesman for the Iranian delegation in talks in Vienna said Sunday.
“Because there is still lots of work to do the delegations will remain beyond Tir 10 (July 1) to continue the negotiations and reach a good overall deal,” the spokesman said.
“At the same time there is no desire or discussion yet on a long-term extension,” he said.
Officials have said that the deadline may be missed by a few days but until now no officials have confirmed that it will.
The talks between Iran the P5+1 — the United States, China, Russia, Britain, France and Germany — are aimed at finalising a framework deal struck in April.
According to that agreement, Iran will sharply reduce its nuclear programme in scale and submit to tighter UN inspections in order to make any drive to make an atomic bomb virtually impossible.
In return Iran, which denies seeking the bomb, will see painful sanctions lifted. Tough remaining issues include the timing and pace of the sanctions relief and UN access to Iranian military bases.