by Boaz Bismuth, Israel Hayom Staff and News Agencies
U.S. President Barack Obama on Iran nuclear talks: We're going to find out over the next three or four weeks whether we can actually get a deal done • Obama reiterates: No deal is better than a bad deal.
Kentucky Senator Mitch McConnell
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Photo credit: AP |
"Senate Republicans remain intent to ensure
that any comprehensive agreement concerning the Iranian nuclear program
both protects the national security of the United States and recognizes
Israel's own defense needs as a security partner of our country,"
Kentucky Senator Mitch McConnell told Israel Hayom on Wednesday. After
the Republicans won control of the Senate in Tuesday's midterm
elections, McConnell will likely become the new Senate majority leader.
In a press at the White House on Wednesday,
U.S. President Barack Obama talked about the ongoing nuclear
negotiations between world powers and Iran, ahead of the Nov. 24
deadline for a final agreement.
"Whether we can actually get a deal done, we're going to have to find out over the next three to four weeks," Obama said.
"Because of the unprecedented sanctions that
we put in place that really did have a crippling effect on Iran's
economy, they've come to the table and they've negotiated seriously
around providing assurances that they're not developing a nuclear weapon
for the first time," Obama said. "And they have abided by the interim
rules. We have been able to freeze their program, in some cases reduce
the stockpile of nuclear material that they already had in hand. And the
discussions, the negotiations have been constructive.
"We have presented to them a framework that
would allow them to meet their peaceful energy needs. And if, in fact,
what their leadership says, that they don't want to develop a nuclear a
weapon -- if that is, in fact, true, then they've got an avenue here to
provide that assurance to the world community, and in a progressive,
step-by-step, verifiable way, allow them to get out from under sanctions
so that they can reenter as full-fledged members of the international
community.
"But they have their own politics, and there's
a long tradition of mistrust between the two countries. And there's a
sizeable portion of the political elite that cut its teeth on
anti-Americanism and still finds it convenient to blame America for
every ill that there is. And whether they can manage to say yes to what
clearly would be better for Iran, better for the region, and better for
the world, is an open question. We'll find out over the next several
weeks."
When asked whether he has the power to
unilaterally relax sanctions on Iran without approval from Congress,
Obama said, "There are a series of different sanctions. There are
multilateral sanctions; there are U.N. sanctions; there are sanctions
that have been imposed by us, this administration, unilaterally. And I
think it's different for each of those areas.
"But I don't want to put the cart before the
horse. What I want to do is see if we, in fact, have a deal. If we do
have a deal that I have confidence will prevent Iran from getting a
nuclear weapon, and that we can convince the world and the public will
prevent Iran from getting a nuclear weapon, then it will be time to
engage in Congress. And I think that we'll be able to make a strong
argument to Congress that this is the best way for us to avoid a nuclear
Iran; that it will be more effective than any other alternatives we
might take, including military action.
"But that requires it being a good deal. And
I've said consistently that I'd rather have no deal than a bad deal --
because what we don't want to do is lift sanctions and provide Iran
legitimacy but not have the verifiable mechanisms to make sure that they
don't break out and produce a nuclear weapon."
U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry said on
Wednesday that reaching a deal with Iran would get more difficult if
negotiations drag beyond the Nov. 24 deadline.
Kerry, speaking ahead of his planned weekend
talks with Iran's foreign minister, said the United States and its
allies were not -- for now -- weighing an extension of the negotiations.
"I think it gets more complicated if you can't" meet the deadline, Kerry said, adding "it's not impossible."
"We have no intention at this point of talking about an extension, and we're not contemplating an extension," Kerry said.
Speaking in Paris after meeting earlier with
French Foreign Minister Laurent Fabius, Kerry placed the burden to
complete a deal on Iran.
"They have a right to a peaceful program but
not a track to a bomb," Kerry said. "We believe it is pretty easy to
prove to the world that a plan is peaceful."
Fabius called it "very important" for the U.S. and France to keep a united front as the negotiations enter the final stretch.
Kerry predicted the change in Senate control would not affect the Iran nuclear talks.
"What is complicated is managing internal
expectations in other places," he said. He was not more specific, but
appeared to refer to U.S. allies such as Israel and Saudi Arabia, which
remain extremely wary of any deal with Iran.
Kerry is due to meet in Muscat, Oman on
November 9 with Iranian Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif and
Catherine Ashton, who recently completed her term as the EU's foreign
policy chief.
Those high-level talks are due to be followed
on November 11 by technical negotiations between Iran and the six
outside powers: China, Russia, the United States, France, Britain and
Germany.
Kerry said he could foresee an extension of
the talks "if we were inches away" from an agreement, with only details
to be filled.
But if there are "big issues hanging out there," he said, "No, I don't."
Boaz Bismuth, Israel Hayom Staff and News Agencies
Source: http://www.israelhayom.com/site/newsletter_article.php?id=21245
Copyright - Original materials copyright (c) by the authors.
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