Conflicting reports on whether announcement will be made pre-dawn Tuesday, as sides wrap up years of tortuous negotiations
An Iran nuclear agreement appeared likely within hours, diplomats said late Monday after a day in which American and Iranian negotiators appeared to be struggling to clear final obstacles and looking like they’d miss their fourth deadline in less than two weeks.
But it was not clear when exactly the deal would be announced.
Diplomats familiar with the talks earlier said the announcement could come in the pre-dawn hours Tuesday. But several officials denied an earlier Reuters report that a photo opportunity and possible press conference were scheduled for 2 a.m. Vienna time (3 a.m. in Israel).
One diplomat had earlier claimed that some of the top officials involved in the negotiations needed to leave Vienna early Tuesday, thus hastening the announcement.
The diplomats weren’t authorized to speak publicly on the status of the negotiations and demanded anonymity.
The announcement, coming after years of negotiations, would mark the completion of a long-sought yet elusive pact for the international community to reign in Tehran’s nuclear ambitions.
Officials earlier indicated that the sides were close to reaching a deal, but would be unable to come together before Tuesday.
The White House said the marathon discussions in Vienna had “made genuine progress” but suggested they would stretch beyond a Monday night deadline.
“There continues to be some sticking points that remain unresolved,” White House spokesman Josh Earnest told reporters in Washington.
He said the United States and its partners did not want to rush the final stages of the lengthy talks.
“Typically, some of the most difficult issues are the ones that get kicked to the end, and that’s why the president is going to resist any effort to sort of fast-forward through the closing here,” Earnest said.
The P5+1 group — the United States, Russia, China, Britain, France and Germany — wants Iran to scale down its atomic activities in order to make any drive to make the nuclear bomb all but impossible.
A source close to Iranian negotiators in the Austrian capital said that diplomats were “working without respite.”
Asked if the talks would continue for an 18th day on Tuesday, he said: “This depends on our work tonight.”
Over the weekend hopes had been raised that the end might be finally in sight and that ministers from Iran and the six powers might be able to nail down the agreement on Monday.
China’s Foreign Minister Wang Yi, joining his counterparts at the Palais Coburg hotel in Vienna where the talks were being held, told reporters there should be “no more delays.”
No deal could be “perfect” but “conditions are already in place for a good agreement,” Wang said through an interpreter, before going into talks with US Secretary of State John Kerry and other ministers.
Iranian Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif said he believed there should be no further extension to the talks — but added that he would negotiate as long as needed.
“I always believe there shouldn’t be any extension but we could work as long as necessary to finish this,” Zarif said as he met Wang.
Also present were Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov and his counterparts from Britain, France and Germany — Philip Hammond, Laurent Fabius and Frank-Walter Steinmeier.
The current diplomatic effort began when Iranian President Hassan Rouhani came to power in 2013. In November that year an interim deal was agreed but two deadlines in 2014 for a lasting accord were missed.
Then in April, the parties scored a major breakthrough by agreeing the main outlines of an accord, aiming to finalise it by June 30, a deadline since pushed back twice.
The terms of the November 2013 interim deal under which Iran froze certain nuclear activities in return for minor sanctions relief were due to expire on Monday night, although they have been extended before.
Much of the technical work in what will be a highly complex accord is done, but the talks have stumbled on the exact timing of sanctions relief and Iran’s desire to have a UN conventional arms embargo lifted.
If a deal can be sewn up, the prospect of a thawing of US-Iranian relations unsettles many in the Middle East, however.
These include Shiite Iran’s Sunni-ruled rivals Saudi Arabia and other Gulf monarchies who see Tehran as a destabilising influence in the region.
Israel, widely assumed to have nuclear weapons itself, is also deeply concerned, complaining that the proposed deal will fail to stop its arch foe getting the bomb.
“We are heading toward a bad deal, and in the period after it we will of course have to continue preparing to protect ourselves on our own,” Defense Minister Moshe Yaalon said on Monday.
Many in the United States, particularly among US President Barack Obama’s Republican opponents, agree that the mooted deal is too weak.
The agreement will prove a “hard sell” in the US Congress, which will have 60 days to chew over the accord, top Republican Mitch McConnell said in an interview broadcast Sunday.
As reported by The Times of Israel