Officials
say world powers and Iran are close to a nuclear deal that would end 12-year
dispute over Tehran's ambitions.Iran and six world powers
meeting in Vienna are said to be close to an historic nuclear
agreement that could resolve a dispute that lasted more than 12
years over Tehran's nuclear ambitions.
Russian Deputy Foreign Minister Sergei Ryabkov
said on Thursday that he could not rule out the possibility of an
agreement in the coming hours, even if there was still doubts over some of the
finer details of the deal and if it could be resolved by the end of the
day.
Iran's Deputy Foreign Minister Abbas Araqchi said
the main text of the agreement, as well as five technical annexes,
were "around 96 percent complete."
While the lifting of sanctions was largely
agreed, Araqchi said Tehran's demand for an end to a UN Security Council arms
embargo was among the most contentious unresolved points.
But an Iranian state broadcaster Press TV cited
an Iranian official as saying it was unlikely an agreement would be reached on
Thursday. A senior Western diplomat similarly also said it was "very
doubtful" the talks would finish on Thursday.
Over the past two weeks, Iran, the United States,
Britain, France, Germany, Russia and China have twice extended a deadline for
completing a long-term deal under which Tehran would curb sensitive nuclear
activities for more than a decade in exchange for sanctions relief.
Western countries accuse Iran of seeking the capability to build nuclear weapons, while Tehran says its programme is peaceful. A deal would depend on Iran accepting curbs on its nuclear programme in return for the easing of economic sanctions imposed by the United Nations, United States and European Union.
A successful deal could be the biggest milestone in decades towards easing hostility between Iran and the United States.
It would also be a political success for both US President Barack Obama and Iran's President Hassan Rouhani.
The current round of talks has blown through two deadlines already and has been extended until Friday, but the Obama administration must submit an agreement to Congress before Thursday turns to Friday in Washington if it wants to avoid an extended legislative review.
If the administration misses that target, the congressional review period will double from 30 to 60 days, possibly delaying the sanctions relief that the US would have to give to Iran under the terms of an agreement.
US Secretary of State John Kerry and Iranian Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif have been meeting daily for two weeks to overcome the last remaining obstacles to a deal.
French Foreign Minister Laurent Fabius and his British and
German counterparts have also rejoined the negotiations.
The White House said President Barack Obama and his national security team held a video conference on Wednesday with Kerry, Ernest Moniz and the US negotiating team in Vienna.
Tehran says the UN embargo on conventional weapons must be lifted in a nuclear deal. Western countries are keen not to allow Iran to begin importing arms because of its role supporting sides in conflicts in the Middle East.
Iran has powerful support on this issue from Russia. Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov said the UN arms embargo should be among the first sanctions lifted in a deal.
"We are calling for lifting the embargo as soon as possible and we will support the choices that Iran's negotiators make," he said at a summit of BRICS countries - Brazil, China, India, Russia and South Africa.
Source: Agencies
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