Iran nuclear deal: It's the hurdles, not the pact, that matter
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| Istanbul
Testing the assumptions behind the headlines
Nuclear negotiators from Iran and six world powers聽on Sunday聽cleared a second hurdle on the path to reaching a permanent nuclear accord, despite objections by hardliners on all sides.
But the agreement made yesterday is no big deal:聽It simply codifies the deal reached in Geneva on聽Nov. 24聽鈥 the first hurdle 鈥 by naming聽Jan. 20聽as the start of the six-month聽window to聽implement聽the聽accord.聽
What is a big deal is that聽the timeline agreed to yesterday was achieved in the face of strong opposition in the US, Israel, and Iran.聽
The deal requires Iran to cap its uranium enrichment and to convert its stockpile of 20 percent enriched uranium, which is a few technical steps from bomb-grade.聽In exchange,聽it will receive $4.2 billion in cash from its own oil sales that have been frozen by sanctions in foreign banks, with a first tranche of $550 million unfrozen in聽the first days of February.
The purpose is to 鈥渟top the clock鈥澛爋n Iran's nuclear program聽for six months so that a final deal can be hammered out without Iran simultaneously making nuclear advances.聽The final deal聽would prevent Iran from being able to make a nuclear bomb without being detected 鈥撀燼n aim that Iran says it rejects.
Iran has repeatedly denied any intent to acquire nuclear weapons. Iranian and P5+1 officials have emphasized any steps they take are reversible.聽Yet as many as 59 US senators have signed on to new legislation that would further restricting Iranian oil exports if the Geneva pact is violated. That sparked a row with the White House, which argues that Iran is already at the negotiating table 鈥 and that more sanctions could derail the process and lead to far more costly alternatives.
President Barack Obama stated yesterday that he would veto any new sanctions, which 鈥渨ill only risk derailing our efforts to resolve this issue peacefully.鈥澛
Iran sees any new sanctions vote in Congress as a violation of the Geneva accord and diplomats say the US measure would 鈥渒ill鈥 the talks. Some Iranian lawmakers vowed that they would respond to any congressional action with their own law requiring Iran to boost enrichment levels to 60 percent, a step closer to the weapons grade of 90 percent,聽and far higher than Iran has enriched to date.
Last week, in a strongly worded speech, Iran鈥檚 Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei聽blasted American policies but said Iran would 鈥渘egotiate with this Satan [the US] in order to ward off its evil and resolve the issue.鈥澛