*REUTERS
The United States and France sought on Saturday to
play down any disagreements over nuclear talks with Iran, saying they
both agreed the accord now under discussion needed to be strengthened.
"We are on the same page," U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry told
reporters after talks with French Foreign Minister Laurent Fabius in
Paris. "If we didn’t think that there was further to go, as Laurent
said, we’d have had an agreement already," Kerry added.
"The reason we don’t have an agreement is, we believe there are gaps
that have to be closed. There are things that have to be done to further
strengthen this. We know this."
The aim of the negotiations is to persuade Iran to restrain its
nuclear program in exchange for relief from sanctions that have crippled
its economy. Iran, a major oil exporter, wants the sanctions scrapped
swiftly, the powers only in phases.
France's Fabius said on Friday commitments offered by Iran in the
nuclear talks with six world powers do not go far enough and more work
needed to be done, notably on what he called "volume, checks and
duration".
On Saturday, he made clear that by volume he meant the number and
quality of centrifuges Iran might be allowed to operate under any deal.
By checks, he meant an inspection and verification regime to ensure Iran
does not violate the deal.
"There is still work to be done," said Fabius, who was also hosting his British, German and EU counterparts in Paris.
France, a U.N. Security Council veto-holder, has long held out for
strict terms, linking any loosening of international sanctions on Iran's
oil-based economy to commitments by Tehran to demonstrate that its
nuclear work is as peaceful as it says.
The discovery in 2013 that the United States was holding secret talks
with Iran was an opportunity for Paris, by saying 'no' to a deal, to
assert itself internationally and to rebuke Washington for backing down
on bombing Syria as punishment for using chemical arms.
It also helped France cement new commercial ties with Gulf Arab states hostile to Iran.
"SOLID AGREEMENT" SOUGHT
"It is a multilateral negotiation, but we want to make sure that our
positions are aired," said Fabius, who stressed several times the need
for a "solid agreement".
U.S. officials privately bristle at what they sometimes see as
France’s effort to insert itself into the diplomacy on Iran and other
issues. Some other diplomats close to the talks say Washington is
rushing into a deal with Iran.
From the outside, it appears as if the negotiations are fundamentally
a U.S.-Iranian bilateral discussion, with the other nations briefed and
brought in periodically.
As well as the United States and France, the other world powers
involved in the Iran negotiations are Britain, China, Germany and
Russia.
Kerry last week held three days of talks with his Iranian counterpart, Mohammad Javad Zarif.
He plans to meet Zarif again on March 15 ahead of talks with all
sides aimed at sealing some form of understanding by the end of March
before a final deal in June.
"The next couple of weeks are crucial," said EU policy chief Federica Mogherini.
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