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3-decade gridlock broken: The nuclear deal with Iran in Geneva


Nima

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Geneva, Switzerland (CNN) -- The diplomatic gridlock between Iran and the West seemed immovable for decades. But on Sunday, diplomats made history when Iran and six world powers came together on an agreement over Iran's nuclear program.

The deal dials back Iran's ability to work toward a nuclear weapon and at the same time loosens the choke hold of international sanctions on Iran's economy.

The two sides now have six months to find out how historic the breakthrough really is. That's the duration of the preliminary agreement hammered out in Geneva, Switzerland, by Iran and the P5+1 -- the five permanent members of the U.N. Security Council plus Germany.

"There are lots of things, regrettably, that we still have to work on. Our hope is that Iranian President Hassan Rouhani and Foreign Minister Javad Zarif want to build this different relationship, want to show in clear ways as we go forward that the program is peaceful," U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry told CNN's "State of the Union."

The foreign policy chiefs from the nations making up the group traveled to Geneva from the United States, Britain, France, Russia, China and Germany on Saturday to pound out the last key points of the deal.
Iran has stumbled from one economic crisis to the next under the sanctions, and unemployment currently runs over 24%.

The breathing room is intended to buy Iran and the negotiating powers time to arrive at a more comprehensive agreement. But it represents an opportunity, not a guarantee.

"It's a little too early to break open Champagne bottles and put on the party hats on this one," said Middle East diplomatic expert Aaron David Miller. Its success hinges on whether or not it leads to a bigger agreement to "put Iran's nuclear weapons program to rest."

That the diplomats came to any accord at all represents a momentous budge in a nearly 35-year deadlock marked by distrust, suspicion and open animosity between the United States and Iran, which broke off diplomatic relations after Iran's revolution in 1979.

It was the first such agreement in 10 years of negotiation attempts over Iran's nuclear program.

"What happened over the last several weeks is by any standard extraordinary," Miller said.

Kerry told CNN that it will be vital to verify Iran's compliance with the deal.

"None of this is based on trust. It's not a question of trust," he said. "It's a question of having the verification and the intrusive inspections and the insights into the program and the commitments that can be held accountable, so that you are in fact creating a fail-safe mechanism by which you are making your judgments."

Success or setback?

Reactions to the breakthrough ran the gamut from joy in Iran to dismay in Israel.

In a televised speech, Rouhani sold it as a win for his negotiators.

"We are pleased after 10 years that an agreement on this level has been reached," he said.

He played up the fact that the deal allows Iran to enrich uranium to a level making it usable as nuclear fuel. During the six months of the agreement, major facilities in Iran will continue doing so, he said. That level, 5% enrichment, is well below the level needed to make weapons.

The deal also marks the beginning of the end of sanctions, Rouhani said.

The announcement was extremely popular with Iranian citizens. They believe this is a golden opportunity to improve relations with the West.

"Everyone in Iran is very happy," Ali, a factory manager, told CNN. "Iranian people want to cooperate with all countries so we can make a best life. ... Iranian people are not dangerous."
He said life with sanctions has been difficult for young people like him.

In the end, Iran's insistence that it has never sought nuclear weapons will be vindicated, Rouhani said, and that notion will go down as a "historical joke."

Iran's Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, traditionally very distrustful of Western powers, seemed pleased. This could be the basis of intelligent actions of the future, he said.

U.S. President Barack Obama took to live television to announce the deal as a success that includes "substantial limitations that will help prevent Iran from creating a nuclear weapon."

Kerry has stressed that Iran will not be permitted to produce bomb-grade enriched uranium.

But decades of mistrust run deep.

Obama's Republican opponents in Washington scorned the deal, and key ally Israel frowned upon it.

Both say it will have the opposite effect, advancing Iran's alleged quest for a bomb.

"This agreement shows other rogue states that wish to go nuclear that you can obfuscate, cheat, and lie for a decade, and eventually the United States will tire and drop key demands," said freshman Sen. Marco Rubio of Florida.

Rubio has been touted as a potential presidential hopeful in the 2016 elections.

Netanyahu: obligation to defend

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu adamantly distrusts Iran and decried the agreement as a "historic mistake" on Sunday.

For decades, he has listened to Iranian leaders threaten the Jewish state, one even saying Israel should be wiped off the map.

During the negotiations in Geneva, Khamenei responded to passionate Israeli skepticism by saying Israeli officials "cannot be even called humans" and referred to Netanyahu as "the rabid dog of the region."

Now that sanctions are working, Netanyahu wants to see the thumbscrews tightened, not loosened, until Iran shuts down much of its nuclear capability, which Tehran claims it will only use for peaceful purposes.

The agreement does not apply to Israel, he said Sunday. If need be, Israel will take matters into its own hands, he said.

"The regime in Iran is dedicated to destroying Israel, and Israel has the right and obligation to defend itself with its own forces against every threat. I want to make clear as the prime minister of Israel, Israel will not let Iran develop a nuclear military capability."

Israeli President Shimon Peres backed up Netanyahu's show of strength but also extended an olive branch.

"I would like to say to the Iranian people: You are not our enemies and we are not yours. There is a possibility to solve this issue diplomatically," Peres said.

He called on Iran to drop ambitions of acquiring a nuclear weapon and end support to terrorists threatening Israel.

Kerry: Israel safer

Kerry thinks Israel became safer from an Iranian threat on Sunday than it was on Saturday, he told CNN's Candy Crowley.

"Israel is threatened by what has been going on in Iran," he conceded. But it is better to have a chance to put Tehran's program in reverse than to let it secretly roll forward toward creating a nuclear bomb.
It's not about getting cozier with Iran, Kerry said.

"We are open not to being duped and not to being tricked and not to being led down the primrose path, but open to setting up a verifiable, clear process," Kerry said.

Washington skeptics

In the weeks before the start of the negotiations, U.S. legislators appeared to be obliging Netanyahu, as they considered loading new sanctions onto the Islamic Republic.

If that happens, Obama may have to veto them, Kerry said. New sanctions would torpedo the deal.

But Kerry said he will assure Congress the deal supports its goal of preventing Iran from developing a nuclear weapon.

Obama has said that the agreement only involves some of the sanctions, leaving the toughest ones in place. The agreement is not about trusting Iran, it is about being able to verify the country's compliance, a White House official said.

The U.N.'s nuclear watchdog, the International Atomic Energy Agency, said it is ready to inspect and monitor Iran's nuclear activities. It called the new deal a "another important step forward."

If things go sour, all options are still on the table, Obama has said, including military strikes on Iran's nuclear facilities.

Obama understands how Israel in particular feels about Iran, a senior administration official said. "You can be sure that President Obama will speak to Prime Minister Netanyahu" on Sunday.

He may also need to have a conversation with Saudi Arabia, which has lasting tensions with Tehran and has been at odds with Obama over much of his Middle East policy.

The government expressed displeasure Sunday with the preliminary deal.

"The Saudi government has been very concerned about these negotiations with Iran and unhappy at the prospect of a deal with Iran," a Saudi government official who is not authorized to speak to the media told CNN.

All about enrichment

The White House and Zarif both insist that the agreement meets their expectations on the issue of uranium enrichment.

Iran has consistently said it is enriching uranium and building nuclear reactors only for peaceful civilian energy needs. Nuclear power plants use uranium that is enriched to 5%. It's the fuel that the plants use to generate electricity.

The White House has said enrichment may not go above that.

Iran must also dilute to below 5%, or convert to a form not suitable for further enrichment, its entire stockpile of near-20% enriched uranium before the end of the initial phase of the deal.
It may not turn on certain centrifuges, the devices used to enrich uranium, that have not yet been brought on line.

This is in line with the terms of the Treaty on the Non-Proliferation of Nuclear Weapons, which Iran has signed onto. It requires Tehran not to create nuclear weapons or enable other countries to obtain them.

Iran has also agreed to what Kerry described as "unprecedented international monitoring" of its nuclear program.

The Rouhani difference

This final round of negotiations in Geneva stretched on for four days, but began months ago in secrecy, shortly after Rouhani replaced Mahmoud Ahmadinejad as Iran's president earlier this year.

Ahmadinejad's foreign policy rhetoric was marked by caustic jabs at the United States and bellicose threats toward Israel. He railed against economic sanctions and drove the advancement of nuclear technology.
Rouhani has struck a more conciliatory tone and made the lifting of sanctions against his country a priority.

U.S. and Iranian officials for months have been holding private, previously secret discussions to generate ideas for the wider nuclear negotiations, a senior Obama administration official confirmed Saturday.
The Americans briefed their P5+1 colleagues. It led to formal negotiations in Geneva.

Catherine Ashton, the European Union's foreign policy chief, led the working negotiations to their near conclusion.

Then, to pound out difficult details, she called in the heavy lifters on Saturday: Kerry, his British counterpart William Hague, France's foreign minister Laurent Fabius, Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi and Russia's foreign policy chief, Sergey Lavrov.

Shortly after 3:00 a.m. local time Sunday, a tweet from a European diplomat let on that there was a deal. An hour later, an Iranian colleague followed suit.

Minutes later, Ashton made the official announcement.

A diplomatic mountain had been moved.

:view: Source: Read more on CNN | Washington Post

Edited by Nima
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I congratulate this agreement to all people around the world, especially Iranians, finally we finished 'the first step' successfully and now we can forward. :)

Many sanctions got cancelled on Iran such as, automobile industry sanctions, airplane industry sanctions, sanctions on high-value metals and materials, sanctions of selling oil, and some sanctions against our national banks and most of our blocked money around the world will be taken back to Iran. B)

We take this as successful campaign and hope we get better agreements next time and all of our issues and troubles get solved. :)

You can get more info on the Iranian Nuclear Energy Program Official Website.

May the Maker watch over all people. ^_^

Edited by Nima
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I congratulate this agreement to all people around the world, especially Iranians, finally we finished 'the first step' successfully and now we can forward. :)

Many sanctions got cancelled on Iran such as, automobile industry sanctions, airplane industry sanctions, sanctions on high-value metals and materials, sanctions of selling oil, and some sanctions against our national banks and most of our blocked money around the world will be taken back to Iran. B)

We take this as successful campaign and hope we get better agreements next time and all of our issues and troubles get solved. :)

You can get more info on the Iranian Nuclear Energy Program Official Website.

May the Maker watch over all people. ^_^

Congratulations to you and your country. I hope this agreement paves way for a better and more peaceful world.

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Hope the human rights issues gets resolved too

Where, in America?

Is it a mullocracy in America? of course I meant Iran!

Edited by nasernori
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sorry but this is a country whose leaders publicly proclaim the west is an enemy of God and that we need to be put to the sword

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This is a big step and opportunity for Iran. I hope and pray they don't squander it. :thumbsup:

sorry but this is a country whose leaders publicly proclaim the west is an enemy of God and that we need to be put to the sword

Sure, let's choke them with more sanctions and prove them right huh?

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This is a big step and opportunity for Iran. I hope and pray they don't squander it. :thumbsup:

sorry but this is a country whose leaders publicly proclaim the west is an enemy of God and that we need to be put to the sword

Sure, let's choke them with more sanctions and prove them right huh?

i did not say that did i... but they are a brutal regime and you are also correct sanctions only hurt the people not the leaders

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This is a big step and opportunity for Iran. I hope and pray they don't squander it. :thumbsup:

sorry but this is a country whose leaders publicly proclaim the west is an enemy of God and that we need to be put to the sword

Sure, let's choke them with more sanctions and prove them right huh?

i did not say that did i... but they are a brutal regime and you are also correct sanctions only hurt the people not the leaders

Are you talking about USA or Iran? :)

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Quit caling usa a repressive regime.

this is about Iran - they talk openly in arabic about the destruction of Israel.

what they say in English is to appease the leaders and the infidels. who they have PERMISSION to lie to.

Their religion gives them permission to mis-lead their victims (infidels) - join Islam or die.

so lets be clear.- they intend to move on the global caliphate, and exterminate ALL OPPOSERS.

I KEEP HEARING ABOUT HOW ITS A "PEACEFUL RELIGION"

RELIGION OF PEACE AND ALL THAT...

THEY define PEACE as a world that is TOTAL ISLAM and SHARIA.

They must cover the world in BLOOD to bring about their Messiah Are you scared yet?

it is in direct opposition to the western defnintion of Peace.

Think about This for a moment ...it occurred to me today........ ABORTION - IS IT LEGAL IN ISLAM?? I bet NOT

then why is it legal here?

if you had en enemy, wouldnt it be nice if you could get them to KILL THEIR BABIES? Planned Parenthood

language is the end game.

I heard one guy on the radio say it like this-

"Islam is a TOTALITARIAN SYSTEM .... Disguised ...AS A RELIGION !" let that sink-in ...read it again...

IT BLEW ME AWAY - NAILED IT RIGHT TO THE WALL.

Edited by jackieo
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unknownasphyxiated

please, don't create any religion-fighting thread

you have your opinion and others had their own opinion

i don't want to argue with you about any of this because the discussion and debate had been running for years and nobody got the answer,just accusation without the truth on why it happen etc

don't be prejudice about Islam..not all Muslim is a terrorist and Islam is not a extremist-religion

:)

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I, as a starter of this topic, politely request responsible persons with required permission to lock this topic to prevent more insults and offenses to anyone.

Sorry all members and thank you all who stated your opinions, but we can not continue in this way, it only makes more people get upset and being offended or attacked.

Kind Regards,

Nima

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I stand by my comments. It is only to inform those who may be un-enlightened of the harsh reality of extreme-ist operatives.

I did not intend to offend anyone who is truly humanitarian

sorry - not trolling - just informing :) good day my friends

Edited by jackieo
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Religion is celebration and encouragement of stupidity. Hope it dies out in the next millennium, I doubt it ever will.

extremism in ANY religion has never been good for mankind.. that being said ...the major religions of this world that are NOT extreme do huge and wondrous things for mankind that i have never seen any atheists doing

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Religion is celebration and encouragement of stupidity. Hope it dies out in the next millennium, I doubt it ever will.

extremism in ANY religion has never been good for mankind.. that being said ...the major religions of this world that are NOT extreme do huge and wondrous things for mankind that i have never seen any atheists doing

Your statemenst is very hopeful and i tend to agree...however one must be vigilant - and not ignore reality.

Dont live with blinders on and rose colored glasses. :) have fun !

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