Tuesday, February 24, 2015

Eye on Iran: Historic US-Iran Nuclear Deal Could Be Taking Shape






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AP: "Edging toward a historic compromise, the U.S. and Iran reported progress Monday on a deal that would clamp down on Tehran's nuclear activities for at least 10 years but then slowly ease restrictions on programs that could be used to make atomic arms... 'We made progress,' U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry said as he bade farewell to members of the American delegation at the table with Iran. More discussions between Iran and the six nations engaging it were set for next Monday, a senior U.S. official said. Iranian Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif said the sides found 'a better understanding' at the negotiating table... The core idea would be to reward Iran for good behavior over the last years of any agreement, gradually lifting constraints on its uranium enrichment and slowly easing economic sanctions... The U.S. initially sought restrictions lasting up to 20 years; Iran has pushed for less than a decade... One variation being discussed would place at least a 10-year regime of strict controls on Iran's uranium enrichment. If Iran complied, the restrictions would be gradually lifted over the final five years. One issue critics are certain to focus on: Once the deal expired, Iran could theoretically ramp up enrichment to whatever level it wanted." http://t.uani.com/1w7qSMl

Reuters: "Iraq is a mainly Arab country. Its citizens, Shi'ite and Sunni Muslims alike, have long mistrusted Iran, the Persian nation to the east. But as Baghdad struggles to fight the Sunni extremist group Islamic State, many Shi'ite Iraqis now look to Iran, a Shi'ite theocracy, as their main ally... In particular, Iraqi Shi'ites have grown to trust the powerful Iranian-backed militias that have taken charge since the Iraqi army deserted en masse last summer. Dozens of paramilitary groups have united under a secretive branch of the Iraqi government called the Popular Mobilisation Committee, or Hashid Shaabi. Created by Prime Minister Haider al-Abadi's predecessor Nuri al-Maliki, the official body now takes the lead role in many of Iraq's security operations. From its position at the nexus between Tehran, the Iraqi government, and the militias, it is increasingly influential in determining the country's future. Until now, little has been known about the body. But in a series of interviews with Reuters, key Iraqi figures inside Hashid Shaabi have detailed the ways the paramilitary groups, Baghdad and Iran collaborate, and the role Iranian advisers play both inside the group and on the frontlines." http://t.uani.com/1acIyla

Reuters: "German exports to Iran jumped 30 percent last year to 2.4 billion euros, data from the Federal Statistics Office showed on Tuesday, bolstered by the easing of Western sanctions amid progress in talks on the country's nuclear programme. Germany is traditionally Iran's biggest trading partner in Europe and last year's increase, the sharpest in a decade, was driven by sales of machinery, agricultural and pharmaceutical products, the Office said. It did not say which companies had benefited. German firms that had been forced to reduce their activities in Iran when the sanctions were tighter include Siemens . Others with business interests there include Bayer and utilities RWE and E.ON. 'At the start of 2014, some of the sanctions were eased so insurance for ship transport and the delivery of car and aircraft parts were allowed,' said Volker Treier, of Germany's DIHK chambers of trade and commerce." http://t.uani.com/1A3jySf

   
Nuclear Program & Negotiations

NYT: "Limits on the number of centrifuges Iran would be allowed, and for how long, are only part of an enormously complex negotiation. 'The number in the abstract is meaningless,' Antony J. Blinken, the newly appointed deputy secretary of state, said at the Aspen Institute in Washington on Monday. Warning time, he added, depends on a number of other factors, including how the centrifuges are configured, whether new or more efficient centrifuges would be used for enrichment, and how much nuclear fuel Iran would be allowed to stockpile in the country. Part of an agreement would require Iran to ship much of its stockpile to Russia, but it is not clear yet how much. The key, Mr. Blinken said, is getting an accord 'that gives you plenty of time to do something' if Iran races for a bomb. He said that he could not predict whether an agreement was possible, but that any deal would have to 'cut off all pathway for Iran to get to a nuclear weapon,' including the covert path. That would require highly intrusive inspections, Mr. Blinken said, the details of which were still up for negotiations. 'What has to result from any agreement is the strongest, most intrusive inspection and access program that any country has ever seen, because Iran has forfeited the trust of the international community,' Mr. Blinken said." http://t.uani.com/1zzxgxk

AFP: "Russia voiced confidence on Tuesday that world powers and Iran would be able to reach a comprehensive accord over Tehran's disputed nuclear programme by a June 30 final deadline. Moscow's chief nuclear negotiator said after the latest round of talks between US Secretary of State John Kerry and Iranian Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad in Geneva that tangible progress was being made. 'We are satisfied to see every new meeting achieve further progress,' the RIA Novosti news agency quoted Russia's Deputy Foreign Minister Sergei Ryabkov as saying. 'There is a growing confidence that an agreement will be reached by the assigned deadline -- in other words, June 30,' Ryabkov said in the Swiss city." http://t.uani.com/1wjVjof

Reuters: "Iran's nuclear negotiator promised speedier cooperation with the International Atomic Energy Agency on Tuesday, days after the U.N. watchdog said Tehran was continuing to stall parts of an investigation into its nuclear programme. 'We agreed ... to move faster and in a better sense (in cooperating with the IAEA),' Abbas Araqchi told reporters after meeting IAEA head Yukiya Amano in Vienna. The U.N. investigation is happening in parallel with talks between Iran and the United States, Russia, Britain, China, France and Germany aimed at reaching a framework deal by an end-March deadline over Iranian nuclear energy work that the West fears is a cover for a weapons programme... The IAEA described Tuesday's meeting as useful but reiterated previous calls on Iran to speed up its cooperation with the investigation into whether work it conducted in the past was linked to nuclear weapons development." http://t.uani.com/1DOasAt

Terrorism

Asharq Al-Awsat: "Iran has been coordinating with Al-Qaeda and its affiliates since 2007 with the aim of carrying out terror attacks against US targets in Dubai and Saudi Arabia, informed sources have told Asharq Al-Awsat. Speaking under condition of anonymity, the sources said coordination between Iran and the global terrorist organization was mainly taking place through Saudi citizen Saleh Al-Qarawi, a senior member of the organization who is on the Kingdom's most-wanted lists and is the founder of Al-Qaeda affiliate the Abdullah Al-Azzam Brigades.  The sources contend Qarawi is the main Al-Qaeda figure coordinating operations from inside Iran, where they say he has been moving freely for a number of years and from where he has been recruiting other Saudi citizens for the organization and coordinating their movement into Iran from the Kingdom." http://t.uani.com/1zD66Wf

Syrian Conflict

Reuters: "Having lost control of its oil wells, Syria has been forced to import crude. Iranian support has remained solid, despite the decline in world oil prices which are around half the level they were at last June, said Safiyeh. 'The import of petroleum products did not stop because of the fall in the oil price. It continued, with the Iranian credit line, and continues until now,' [the Syrian minister of internal trade and consumer protection Hassan] Safieh said. He did not give numbers. 'There is an Iranian credit line. The truth is there are excellent (credit) facilities, and also Russia stands with us and the BRICs are standing with us in any matters requiring the provision of necessary supplies,' he said." http://t.uani.com/1vsbzms

Human Rights

IranWire: "An influential cleric has called for increased censorship, bans on concerts and greater solidarity among hardliners. Iran's cultural environment was currently in 'chaos,' Mohammadali Movahedi Kermani announced to an audience at the closing ceremony for the Islamic Student Association conference at Mash-had Ferdosi University in mid-February. He urged Ministry of Culture officials to practice restraint when granting permits for publications and complained that there were not enough 'useful' books presented at fairs and conferences. 'Under the present conditions, authorities should initiate a jihadist movement,' he said, according to Rasanews. He emphasized the need for censorship and called for 'obscene concerts' to be banned." http://t.uani.com/1GoFb5n

Foreign Affairs

Sydney Morning Herald: "Julie Bishop is to become the first senior Australian government figure to visit Iran in more than a decade and only the second senior Western leader over that same period, when she travels to Tehran in April. The trip is being viewed as a potential game-changer in the fight against the Sunni-extremist Islamic State organisation, but it could also help unlock lucrative economic opportunities for Australia - reviving a once booming trade in education, wheat, meat, and other areas. It is understood the rare visit by a senior US-aligned government figure has received the enthusiastic backing of the White House, which hopes Australia might provide a conduit for a new constructive dialogue between Washington and Tehran given the common enemy currently rampaging through Iraq, Syria, and now Libya. It follows a specific invitation by the country's foreign minister, Mohammad Javad Zarif. The Australian Foreign Minister's Middle East foray will take place in April, less than two months before the US and Iran hit a self-imposed deadline for a comprehensive nuclear energy deal." http://t.uani.com/1w7ncdt

Opinion & Analysis

Eli Lake & Josh Rogin in Bloomberg: "For anyone hoping a nuclear deal with Iran might stop the Tehran government from destabilizing the Middle East or free its political prisoners, the Obama administration has some bad news: It's just an arms control agreement. As details of a proposed pact leaked out of the Geneva talks Monday, administration officials told us they will ask the world to judge any final nuclear agreement on the technical aspects only, not on whether the deal will spur Iranian reform. 'The only consideration driving what is part of any comprehensive agreement with Iran is how we can get to a one-year breakout time and cut off the four pathways for Iran to get enough material for a nuclear weapon, period,' said State Department spokeswoman Marie Harf. 'And if we reach an agreement, that will be the basis upon which people should judge it -- on the technical merits of it, not on anything else.' When asked if the State Department would argue the benefits of any deal in part by saying it would help Iran's president, Hassan Rouhani, against his country's hard-liners and therefore promote reforms, Harf said: 'This is absolutely ridiculous.' This is a long way from the grand aspirational sentiments expressed by President Barack Obama back in 2009, when he announced his intention to engage Iran. Obama, speaking on the Persian new year celebration of Nowruz, said he wanted 'the Islamic Republic of Iran to take its rightful place in the community of nations.' Back then, many advocates for engagement argued that the nuclear deal could unlock the key to moderating Iran's rogue behavior. Iran, however, spurned Obama's outstretched hand. A few months after the Nowruz message, the regime conducted widespread arrests of people who had protested a presidential election they claimed their country's supreme leader had stolen. And in 2011, Iran stuck with Syria's dictator, Bashar al-Assad, as he declared war on his own people with barrel bombs and chemical weapons. This year, Iran's fingerprints are all over the overthrow of the pro-American government in Yemen and violent Shiite militias unleashed in Iraq. Given that track record, it's easy to understand why the Obama administration would now focus on the nonproliferation benefits of an Iran deal alone. A senior official told us that the White House's arguments would not suggest a 'broad rapprochement' with Iran, and would 'make clear that any deal will not lessen in any way our concerns about Iran's regional policies.' Yet many of the White House's allies will make a markedly different case for an Iran deal, should one come about. Several advocates told us Monday that one of the advantages of an accord is that any phased lifting of sanctions, combined with a decrease in hostility between Iran and the country its leaders call 'the great Satan,' could help the country's moderates and over time lead to reforms in the world's leading state sponsor of terrorism."  http://t.uani.com/1EMI92v
        

Eye on Iran is a periodic news summary from United Against Nuclear Iran (UANI) a program of the American Coalition Against Nuclear Iran, Inc., a tax-exempt organization under Section 501(c)(3) of the Internal Revenue Code. Eye on Iran is not intended as a comprehensive media clips summary but rather a selection of media elements with discreet analysis in a PDA friendly format. For more information please email Press@UnitedAgainstNuclearIran.com

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