Negotiations move closer
to March 31 cutoff without a breakthrough
By JAY SOLOMON and LAURENCE NORMAN
LAUSANNE,
Switzerland—France is again adopting the toughest line against Iran in
negotiations aimed at curbing
Tehran’s nuclear program, potentially placing Paris at odds with the Obama
administration as a diplomatic deadline to forge an agreement approaches at
month-end.
President Barack Obama called French President François Hollandeon Friday to discuss
the Iran diplomacy and try to unify their positions. The presidents “reaffirmed
their commitment” to a deal “while noting that Iran must take steps to resolve
several remaining issues,” the White House said.
French diplomats have been publicly pressing the U.S. and other world powers not to give ground on key elements—particularly the speed of lifting U.N. sanctions and the pledge to constrain Iran’s nuclear research work—ahead of the March 31 target.
Paris also appears to be operating on a different
diplomatic clock than Washington, arguing that the date is an “artificial”
deadline and that global powers should be willing to wait Tehran out for a
better deal if necessary.
Obama administration
officials have said that expected moves by the U.S. Congress to put new
sanctions on Iran as soon as April limit their ability to extend the diplomacy.
But French officials took exception.
“Making the end of March an absolute deadline is
counterproductive and dangerous,” France’s ambassador to the U.S., Gérard Araud, said via Twitter after
the latest round of negotiations in Switzerland concluded Friday.
“No agreement without concrete decisions on issues beyond
the enrichment capability question,” he said a day earlier, specifically
mentioning the need for extensive monitoring and clarity on Iran’s past
research work. Western officials believe they included the pursuit of
nuclear-weapon capabilities.
In a sign of France’s determination, Foreign Minister Laurent Fabius called his negotiating
team in Lausanne on Thursday to insist no deal could be forged that allowed for
the rapid easing of U.N. Security Council measures, according to European
officials.
France worries the quick repeal of the U.N. penalties
could lead to a broader collapse of the West’s financial leverage over Tehran,
according to these officials. French diplomats, however, say their strong
stance against nuclear proliferation has been a central foreign policy tenet
for years. By remaining one of the world’s few nuclear powers, France can
maintain an independent role in global affairs.
Paris is demanding Tehran address evidence that it has
conducted research into the development of nuclear weapons to get those U.N.
penalties relaxed. Iran has for years denied the allegations and some officials
fear that forcing Tehran to publicly reverse itself could break the diplomacy.
Mr. Fabius has served as diplomatic foil in the Iranian
diplomacy in the past.
In November 2013, the former French prime minister said a
deal that the U.S. had been negotiating with Tehran in Geneva was a “fool’s
game” and didn’t go far enough in limiting Iran’s nuclear capabilities. His
comments briefly delayed the signing of an interim agreement that modestly
rolled back Tehran’s program.
Western officials in recent days have stressed that
Washington and the other powers negotiating with Iran—France, the U.K.,
Germany, Russia and China—remain united. Still, Obama administration officials
have voiced frustration with France’s public posturing, arguing it isn’t
constructive.
‘Our nations have been separated by mistrust and fear. Now it is early spring. We have a chance—a chance—to make progress that will benefit our countries, and the world, for many years to come.’
Some U.S. officials privately believe France is seeking
in part to maintain strong ties to Israel and to Arab countries deeply
skeptical of Washington’s outreach to Tehran. French defense companies have
signed lucrative arms deals with Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates in
recent years.
Secretary of State John
Kerry wrapped up five
days of direct talks with his Iranian counterpart, Javad Zarif, in Lausanne without a breakthrough.
Mr. Kerry is traveling to London on Saturday to meet with Mr. Fabius and the
foreign ministers of the U.K. and Germany.
These countries will return to Switzerland as soon as
Wednesday to resume the negotiations.
“We’ve had a series of intensive discussions with Iran
this week, and given where we are in the negotiations, it’s an important time
for high-level consultations with our partners in these talks,” said State
Department spokeswoman Marie
Harf.
While U.S., Russian, Chinese and Iranian diplomats have
stressed the progress made in the talks, others have been more cautious. One
European diplomat said on Thursday: “I don’t think we have made sufficient
progress. A lot of issues remain on the table.”
Wang Qun, China’s
senior diplomat at the talks, said Friday there had been “good progress” this
past week. “I do see some novelties in this round of negotiations,” he said,
adding that both sides had shown “very strong political will.”
Failure to reach a political understanding on time could
firm up political opposition to the negotiations in Washington.
On Thursday, Senators Bob
Corker (R.-Tenn.) and Robert
Menendez(D.-N.J.) said the Senate Foreign Relations Committee will
vote April 14 on a bill that would give U.S. lawmakers an up-and-down vote on
the agreement.
U.S. officials initially believed the negotiations could
stretch until Sunday. But Iran’s delegation abruptly left on Friday, citing the
death of the mother of President Hasan
Rouhani. Iranian officials also
said they wanted to return to Tehran for the beginning of the Persian New Year,
called Nowruz.
In a meeting with his Iranian counterpart on Friday, Mr.
Kerry expressed his condolences for the death of the president’s mother and
called for “progress and peace” at the start of Nowruz.
Mr. Zarif responded: “I hope this new day will be a new
day for the entire world.”
Both sides had hoped to wrap up the talks before the
start of the Iranian holiday.
Mr. Obama also sent a Nowruz message to Iranians on
Thursday. He stressed the importance of a deal in potentially opening a new era
of cooperation between Washington and Tehran, who have been staunch adversaries
since Iran’s 1979 Islamic revolution.
“Our nations have been separated by mistrust and fear.
Now it is early spring. We have a chance—a chance—to make progress that will
benefit our countries, and the world, for many years to come,” Mr. Obama said.