In Iran nuke talks, sides never 'closer,' German envoy says

But Kerry downbeat, warns of ‘gaps’; discussion seen on deadline extension

German Foreign Minister Frank-Walter Steinmeier (left) and U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry speak Saturday in Vienna about talks on Iran’s nuclear program. Steinmeier said the talks had reached “a moment of truth.”
German Foreign Minister Frank-Walter Steinmeier (left) and U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry speak Saturday in Vienna about talks on Iran’s nuclear program. Steinmeier said the talks had reached “a moment of truth.”

VIENNA -- U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry warned of "serious gaps" in talks about a nuclear deal with Iran, but as Monday's deadline approached his German counterpart said Tehran and six world powers have "never been closer" to agreement since they started negotiating more than six years ago.

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AP

Iranian Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif said of nuclear talks that as of Saturday he had “no remarkable offers and ideas to take to Tehran.”

Discussions of going past that deadline have not begun between Iran and the U.S. -- the lead players in negotiations that formally group six world powers on one side of the negotiating table and the Iranians on the other.

One American official familiar with the talks said Saturday that the U.S. has not wanted to prematurely raise the possibility of an extension because that could take pressure off the Iranians.

However, as the clock ticks toward the deadline, the official -- who demanded anonymity because his information was confidential -- said discussion of an extension was inevitable.

The United States -- backed by Russia, China, Britain, France and Germany -- is seeking a deal that cuts, and puts long-term limits on, Iranian nuclear programs that could be used to make weapons. Iran says it does not want such arms but is negotiating in the hope of reducing sanctions imposed because of its nuclear activities.

In addition to lingering debate over stockpiles of uranium gas that can be enriched to levels ranging from reactor fuel to the fissile core of nuclear arms and permissible numbers of centrifuges that do the enriching, Iran is eager for immediate and comprehensive sanctions relief. The U.S. is holding to a strict incremental timetable that would allow penalties to be quickly reimposed in the event of Iranian noncompliance.

In addition to Kerry's note of pessimism Saturday about the talks, German Foreign Minister Frank-Walter Steinmeier said the sides are "still far apart" on some questions. But he suggested the differences are bridgeable, declaring that the talks have reached "a moment of truth." Success or failure, he said, "is still completely open at this point."

Steinmeier spoke after arriving in Vienna to join Kerry's efforts to move the talks forward and shortly before meeting with the chief U.S. diplomat.

High-level comings and goings since Friday also have seen British Foreign Secretary Philip Hammond and French Foreign Minister Laurent Fabius stop by for talks with Kerry, Iranian Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif and other participants in the negotiations.

Kerry's outlook on the talks jibed with comments from diplomats familiar with the discussions, who said prospects for a final agreement by the deadline appeared slim.

Kerry -- who has met repeatedly with Zarif since arriving Thursday -- spoke by telephone Saturday to Arab foreign ministers in the Persian Gulf, whose countries fear Iran's potential abilities to make nuclear arms, and with his Canadian and Turkish counterparts, the U.S. State Department said. He also talked with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu by phone.

Hopes of progress were briefly boosted Friday, with reports that Zarif planned to fly to Tehran for additional consultations. That could have meant possible progress, suggesting that the Iranians need political approval from Tehran to move forward.

Iranian media initially spoke of a new U.S. initiative that Zarif needed to have his superiors approve, but the Iranian diplomat dashed those hopes, saying he was staying in Vienna and had "no remarkable offers and ideas to take to Tehran."

Asked about the prospects of an agreement while taking an outside cigarette break from a meeting Saturday, Zarif shouted "Inshallah" ("God willing") in Farsi.

The speed at which sanctions hurting Iran's economy are rolled back under a possible deal remained one of the main sticking points, four diplomats told Bloomberg News when talks began last week. Iran's capacity to produce fissile material is the other main point of disagreement, they said.

An accord already exists in draft version, containing a four- or five-page introduction followed by 30 to 40 pages of details, according to a senior Iranian diplomat cited by the Iranian Student News Agency.

"All the elements of an agreement are already on the table, and the task of diplomats now is to correctly put together a package," Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov said Friday in Moscow, predicting that "common sense" will prevail. Lavrov will "probably" travel to participate in talks before the deadline expires, Tass reported Saturday.

Iran's Khorasan newspaper, citing an unnamed official familiar with the negotiations, reported that Zarif has taken a softer tone at this round of talks -- a departure from the shouting that it said had characterized past rounds.

Information for this article was contributed by Matthew Lee, George Jahn, Margaret Childs and Amer Cohadzic of The Associated Press and by Jonathan Tirone, Terry Atlas and Kambiz Foroohar of Bloomberg News.

A Section on 11/23/2014

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