Iran Nuclear NewsAshton, Iran's Zarif to meet Monday in Istanbul: media

Ashton, Iran’s Zarif to meet Monday in Istanbul: media

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AFP: EU foreign policy chief Catherine Ashton and Iran’s Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif are to meet Monday in Istanbul to review progress on negotiations toward a nuclear deal, media reports said.

 

AFP – EU foreign policy chief Catherine Ashton and Iran’s Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif are to meet Monday in Istanbul to review progress on negotiations toward a nuclear deal, media reports said.

The previously unannounced two-day meeting comes after fruitless talks between Iran and world powers in Vienna earlier this month when no “tangible progress” was made ahead of a July 20 deadline.

The Istanbul meeting was announced on Iranian media, with the ISNA news agency citing a source close to the Islamic republic’s nuclear negotiating team.

Zarif left Tehran at around 10 am (0530 GMT) and will head to Algeria on Tuesday when his meetings with Ashton end.

No representatives from the P5+1 group — the five permanent members of the UN Security Council plus Germany — that is negotiating with Iran over its nuclear activities will be at the meeting, the report added.

No further details of the discussions between Zarif and Ashton were disclosed but several issues reportedly remain.

These include the scope of Iran’s enrichment of uranium, which if further purified could be used to trigger a nuclear explosion, and its unfinished Arak research reactor, whose by-product waste could provide an alternative route to an atomic bomb.

Iranian and Western negotiators said major gaps remained after the talks in Vienna, which failed to spark the start of producing an early draft of a comprehensive agreement.

Iran’s refusal to include its development of ballistic missiles at the nuclear talks also reportedly caused a rift in Vienna.

But all sides have since expressed willingness to continue the talks in the coming months, with the P5+1 seeking to curb Iran’s nuclear activities which international monitors suspect could be masking military objectives.

Iran — which denies ever seeking nuclear weaponry and insists its atomic work is for purely civilian purposes — wants an end to harsh sanctions choking its economy.

It also wants access to billions of dollars of its foreign assets which were frozen.

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