Kerry arrives in Switzerland to resume Iran nuclear talks

Kerry arrives in Switzerland to resume Iran nuclear talks

PanARMENIAN.Net - U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry is back in Switzerland to resume Iran nuclear talks as negotiations go down to the wire against an end-of-month deadline for the outline of a deal, the Associated Press reports.

With just days until that target is reached, Kerry touched down in Geneva late Wednesday, March 26, and was driven to the lake resort of Lausanne. En route to Geneva, U.S. officials said the deadline is achievable but remains uncertain amid significant gaps in certain areas.

One official traveling with Kerry to the talks said the American side "can see a path forward to get to agreement" by the end of March. The official said the last round of talks, also in Lausanne, produced more progress than many previous rounds when it ended last weekend. The official was not authorized to discuss the talks by name and spoke on condition of anonymity, according to the AP.

Kerry is hoping to seal a framework deal to roll back Iran's nuclear program in exchange for sanctions relief in make-or-break talks with Iranian Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif. The top diplomats from Britain, China, France, Germany and Russia would join if the U.S. and Iran are close to an agreement.

The seven nations have set themselves a March 31 deadline for the outline of a final accord they hope to seal by the end of June. Both President Barack Obama and Iran's Ayatollah Ali Khamenei have spoken against what would be a third extension of the talks.

The United States and its partners are trying to get Iran to cut the number of centrifuges it uses to enrich uranium, material that can be used in warheads, and agree to other restrictions on what the Islamic Republic insists is a peaceful nuclear program.

Kerry said the whole point of years of U.S. sanctions was to get Iran to agree to limits on its nuclear program. He said it was the Obama administration's job to "provide an agreement that is as good as we said it will be; that will get the job done; that shuts off the four pathways to a nuclear weapon."

The alternative to diplomacy could mean Iran is left to "just expand its program full-speed ahead," Kerry said. "You know we can't accept that. So where does that take you? Anybody standing up in opposition to this has an obligation to stand up and put a viable, realistic alternative on the table. And I have yet to see anybody do that."

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