Archive for the ‘Iran’ Category

Iran Ramsar toursit attractions – Video


Iran Ramsar toursit attractions
In this edition of Iran, Press TV #39;s Amir Mehdi Kazemi continues his tour around the fantastic city of Ramsar and visits the city #39;s grand hotel. Watch PressTV Live: http://www.presstv.ir/live.h...

By: PressTV News Videos

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Iran Ramsar toursit attractions - Video

Amina Taylor introduces Europe-Iran Forum – Video


Amina Taylor introduces Europe-Iran Forum
Introducing the first Europe-Iran Forum held in London. Bringing together politicians and business leaders working towards post-sanctions relations between Iran and Europe.

By: Press TV UK

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Amina Taylor introduces Europe-Iran Forum - Video

Can U.S. solve Rubiks Cube of Iran nuclear negotiations? – Video


Can U.S. solve Rubiks Cube of Iran nuclear negotiations?
With less than six weeks before the deadline to agree on an Iran nuclear deal, negotiations have come to a kind of stalemate over sharp limits on Iran #39;s uranium enrichment capability. Gwen...

By: PBS NewsHour

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Can U.S. solve Rubiks Cube of Iran nuclear negotiations? - Video

Iran Nuclear Talks Bogged Down After Kerry Departure

Attempts to end the decade-long conflict over Irans nuclear work remained mired over disagreements after another round of high-level negotiations in Vienna failed to make headway.

Lower-level talks continued today in the Austrian capital between Iran and six world powers, European Union spokesman Michael Mann said in a written statement. Yesterdays six-hour round of talks between U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry, Iranian Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif and the EU foreign-policy chief, Catherine Ashton, produced no breakthrough.

Technical experts will convene again within two weeks, and another round is planned with Kerry and Ashton before the end of next month, Zarif said, without identifying where the talks would continue, according to the official Islamic Republic News Agency. Technical solutions to resolve some disputes gained traction, according to a U.S. official who asked not to be named in line with diplomatic rules.

Iranian diplomats and former U.S. officials have said an extension of the talks may be warranted if the sides cant bridge their gaps before a self-imposed Nov. 24 deadline. Irans deputy foreign minister, Abbas Araghchi, said before this round began that the deadline definitely wont be reached without progress this week in Vienna.

The interim agreement currently in place gave Iran limited relief from economic sanctions in exchange for caps on uranium enrichment. Iran has eliminated the stockpile of its most sensitive nuclear material and its economy has returned to growth. International Atomic Energy Agency inspectors have received wider access to Iranian nuclear facilities as they seek to ensure the country doesnt divert material that could be used for weapons.

Kerry said Oct. 14 in Paris that the November deadline isnt out of reach. Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov said after meeting in Paris with Kerry and French Foreign Minister Laurent Fabius that a compromise can be achieved for a deal, though theres no guarantee it would be reached by next month.

The dispute has cast the specter of military conflict over Iran, home to the worlds fourth-largest oil reserves. Israel has said its prepared to strike Iran to prevent it from obtaining nuclear weapons. Iran has repeatedly said it doesnt want a bomb and international monitors have confirmed its declared stockpiles of nuclear material remain in peaceful uses.

To contact the reporter on this story: Jonathan Tirone in Vienna at jtirone@bloomberg.net

To contact the editors responsible for this story: Alan Crawford at acrawford6@bloomberg.net Eddie Buckle, Fergal OBrien

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Iran Nuclear Talks Bogged Down After Kerry Departure

Can U.S. uphold Iran nuclear deal?

STORY HIGHLIGHTS

Editor's note: Tyler Cullis is a Legal Fellow & Policy Associate at the National Iranian American Council. He is a graduate of the Boston University School of Law. The views expressed in this commentary are solely those of the author.

(CNN) -- With Iran's Foreign Minister Javad Zarif and U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry set to meet in Vienna and the November 24 deadline to the P5+1 and Iran nuclear talks in sight, the White House's ability to provide Iran with significant sanctions relief early in a nuclear deal remains unclear. At the same time, any perceived failure by the U.S. to deliver could complicate, if not poison, what will already be a tenuous post-deal period.

U.S. negotiators have not helped their cause. During the latest round of talks in New York, the U.S.'s lead negotiator, Wendy Sherman, promised that "as soon as we [the U.S.] suspend our major sanctions -- which will happen very early in the agreement -- the world will flood into Iran." Her comment was echoed by that of Western diplomats, who likewise urged the Iranians "not [to] underestimate the huge economic relief for their people" in case of a nuclear deal.

Tyler Cullis

READ: Opinion: U.S. hard-liners missing point on Iran

Holding out the carrot to Iran is a sensible negotiating strategy, but only insofar as the U.S. and its European partners can deliver on it. Few, however, believe that to be the case. Companies that would otherwise jump at the opportunity to capture Iran's enormous market are being advised to take a wait-and-see approach in the case of a nuclear deal. At the same time, Iran's population -- according to recent polling -- remains in a state of disbelief as to the U.S.'s willingness to lift the sanctions and turn the page in its relationship with Tehran.

This should be a major source of concern. It'd be the ultimate tragedy for the White House, which has spent as much political capital as it has on the nuclear negotiations, to have defeat snatched from the jaws of victory thanks to the lingering effects of its sanctions. With a region in turmoil as ISIS, which calls itself the "Islamic State," continues its rampage through Iraq and the Levant, the Obama administration cannot afford the outbreak of hostilities with Iran. That's why President Obama must take steps to instill confidence in all parties that the U.S. can uphold its end of any nuclear bargain.

What can the White House do?

First, control the process. What the White House needs to do is take control of the sanctions file, create a plan of action for sanctions relief, and oversee the various federal agencies involved with sanctions enforcement. Some of that has occurred during the interim period of negotiations -- as the White House was not keen on any surprises that would frustrate the Iranians and the nuclear talks in the process -- but White House involvement needs to accelerate if sanctions relief is to take place in a clear and coordinated fashion.

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Can U.S. uphold Iran nuclear deal?