US
Secretary of State John Kerry says Iran and the P5+1 countries have made “substantial
progress”
in talks on Teheran’s
nuclear program, adding that now is the “time
to make hard decisions.”
Washington
isn’t rushing to reach the agreement just
for the sake of beating the self-imposed end-March deadline for a framework
agreement between Iran and six major powers, Kerry said on Saturday in
Switzerland before leaving for London for talks with his British, French and
German counterparts.
Kerry
said that "we have worked long and hard to achieve an agreement that
resolves concerns on Iran's program". "The stakes are high and the
issues are complicated and all interrelated. Once again let me also be clear.
We do not want just any deal. If we had, we should have announced something a
long time ago and clearly since the joint plan of action was agreed we're not
rushing," he said. "This has been a two and a half year more process,
but we recognize that fundamental decisions have to be made now, and they don't
get any easier as time goes by. It's time to make hard decisions,”
he noted.
Iran
and the P5+1 countries are in talks to work out a comprehensive agreement aimed
at ending the longstanding dispute over the Islamic Republic’s
civilian nuclear work as a July 1 deadline approaches.
On
Friday, the sixth day of the latest round of negotiations in the Swiss city of
Lausanne, another meeting was held between Iranian Foreign Minister Mohammad
Javad Zarif and Kerry. Following his talks with Kerry, Zarif said, “We
made good progress over this week. We’ve done a lot
of hard work, but some work remains ahead.”
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