Kerry cites big gaps in nuclear talks with Iran

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VIENNA — The fate of a possible landmark nuclear deal with Iran sank further into limbo Tuesday, with U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry noting “very real gaps” ahead of a Sunday target date for a deal meant to put firm curbs on Tehran’s atomic program. Kerry, who joined the foreign ministers of Britain, France and Germany on the weekend to add diplomatic muscle to the talks, said the negotiations would continue until at least Sunday.

VIENNA — The fate of a possible landmark nuclear deal with Iran sank further into limbo Tuesday, with U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry noting “very real gaps” ahead of a Sunday target date for a deal meant to put firm curbs on Tehran’s atomic program. Kerry, who joined the foreign ministers of Britain, France and Germany on the weekend to add diplomatic muscle to the talks, said the negotiations would continue until at least Sunday.

In the meantime, he said, he would consult with President Barack Obama and the U.S. Congress about where the talks are if no pact is agreed on by Sunday.

“There has been tangible progress on key issues,” Kerry told reporters. “However there are very real gaps on other key issues.”

He spoke after multiple conversations with Iranian Foreign Minister Mohammed Javad Zarif and separate meetings with the foreign ministers of Britain, France and Germany, who also converged on the Vienna talks in an attempt to move them forward.

An extension of up to six months is possible for the negotiations by mutual agreement, and Zarif suggested that is likely. He said there was enough progress “to be able to tell our political bosses back home … that this is a process which is worth continuing.”

“This is my recommendation,” he told reporters. “And I’m sure Secretary Kerry will make the same decision.”

But that may be a hard sell. Many Congress members are already skeptical about the sense of trying to get a negotiated reduction in Iran’s nuclear program and oppose going on with them. Any decision to go past July 20 would also likely be criticized by hard-liners in Iran, who fear the talks will result in a scaling-back of their country’s nuclear program.

Kerry and Zarif spoke separately after multiple conversations with each other.

The main dispute is over Iran’s nuclear enrichment program. Tehran says it needs to expand enrichment to make reactor fuel but the U.S. fears Tehran could steer the activity toward manufacturing the core of nuclear missiles and could use its present capacity to produce enough weapons-grade uranium for one warhead in only months. The U.S. wants deep enrichment cuts for at least 20 years; Iran wants to greatly expand enrichment over less than a decade.

Neither minister detailed the substance of their conversions. But a diplomat familiar with their content said they focused not only on enrichment but on other disputes, including how to diminish proliferation dangers from a reactor in the city Arak that would produce substantial amounts of plutonium when completed. Like enriched uranium, plutonium can be used to make nuclear weapons, and the diplomat said the Iranians are ready to reconfigure plans so that less plutonium is generated.

But their model could be reverse-engineered and the Americans want a totally converted model that cannot be reconverted to increased plutonium output. The diplomat demanded anonymity because he is not allowed to discuss the confidential negotiations.

For the U.S. and Iran, an extension of the talks makes sense in multiple ways. With so much at stake, and the potential for U.S.-Iranian cooperation in other areas being explored, neither side wants to terminate the nuclear talks. Such a course could put Tehran back on a path toward isolation and even set the stage for U.S. military action if Iran proceeded again toward nuclear weapons capacity.

But they must take into account the difficult internal pressures against a deal — or an extension for that matter.

David Albright, whose Institute for Science and International Security is often consulted by the U.S. government on Iran’s nuclear program, said that a full six-month extension of the talks makes sense only “if Iran accepts that the number of its centrifuges must be reduced and the Arak reactor converted permanently.”

“If the six cannot get at least two major concessions now, they are unlikely to get them and the others needed six months from now,” he said in an email.