Diplomats have agreed a four-month extension to the deadline for an agreement between Iran and world powers onIran's nuclear programme.The US says it will unblock $2.8bn in frozen Iranian funds, in return for Iran continuing to convert its stocks of 20%-enriched uranium into fuel.The
talks have aimed to persuade Iran to limit its nuclear programmein
exchange for the lifting of sanctions.World powers suspect Iran seeks
atomic weapons, which Iran denies.The country insists that it is
enriching uranium for use in nuclear power stations and for medical
purposes.Reuters reports that negotiations will now resume in September,
with a final deadline set for 24 November."There are still significant
gaps on some core issues which will requiremore time and effort," said a
joint statement issued by EU foreign policy chief Catherine
Ashton
and Iran's Foreign Minister MohammadJavad Zarif.Analysis: Amir Paivar,
BBC Persian, in ViennaThough talks have now been extended, let's not
forget that the two sides have failed to reach a much anticipated
deal.The extension of talks is good newsand bad. It is a sign that
diplomacycould still work but opponents nowhave the chance to score in
extra time.Some US Congress members claim Tehran is buying time to aid
the Iranian economy, already choking under the pressure of sanctions.And
hardliners in Iran are becoming more vocal against the deal over fears
it could mean better ties with the US.The odds against the deal are
already high and both sides could use the next four months to derail any
comprehensive agreement.Behind the scenes at the Iran nuclear talks
hotelUS Secretary of State John Kerry said the US would "continue to
vigorously enforce the sanctions that remain in place" on Iran, during the extended period of talks.But the US
said it would allow Iran to access $2.8bn in funds that had been frozen
after Iran agreed to continue converting its 20%-enriched uranium
stocks during the four-month extension.The 20%-enriched uranium is a
medium level of purity and expertssay once it reaches that level it
could be enriched to weapons-grade, or 90% purity, in a relativelyshort
time.The talks in Vienna bring together Iran and the so-called P5+1
group, comprising the US, UK, France, China, Russia and Germany.An
interim deal between the two sides was reached last year.However, the
parties have been unable to reach agreement on imposing long-term
restrictions over Iran's uranium enrichment and plutonium production -
processes that could yield materialfor nuclear warheads.A deal could see
the lifting of oil and trade sanctions on Iran.
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