Iran, world powers agree ’historic’ framework nuclear deal
LAUSANNE - Agence France-Presse
REUTERS Photo
Iran and six world powers have agreed the framework of a potentially
historic deal aimed at curbing Tehran's nuclear drive, but Israel warned
that any binding future pact would threaten its survival.
The
Thursday agreement marked a major breakthrough in a 12-year standoff
between Iran and the West -- which has long feared Tehran wants to build
a nuclear bomb -- and raised hopes the deal could help stability in the
Middle East.
US President Barack Obama welcomed the
"historic understanding" with the Islamic republic after decades of
hostility, but cautioned that more work needed to be done.
"If Iran cheats, the world will know it," he said in a televised address from the White House.
Under
the framework, Iran agreed to sharply curtail its nuclear programme in
return for the lifting of sanctions that have crippled the country's
economy.
Hundreds of Iranians took to the streets of
Tehran in celebration after the agreement was announced, with drivers
sounding their horns in approval along the capital's longest street,
Val-e-Asr Avenue.
Netanyahu to Obama: Emerging Iran deal threat to Israel's survival But Iran's arch-foe Israel, widely
assumed to have atomic weapons of its own, said the deal would increase
the risks of nuclear proliferation and of "a horrific war", with Israeli
Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu telling Obama the deal "would not
block Iran's path to the bomb. It would pave it," according to an
Israeli spokesman.
"A deal based on this framework would
threaten the survival of Israel," Mark Regev added in a series of
tweets, citing Netanyahu.
The main outlines agreed after
eight days of talks that sometimes went through the night in the Swiss
city of Lausanne now have to be finalised in a highly complex agreement
by June 30.
Failure may set the United States and Israel
on a road to military action to thwart Iran's nuclear drive and keep
Tehran out in the cold on the international stage.
US
Secretary of State John Kerry hailed a "big day", while Iranian
President Hassan Rouhani said the drafting of a full accord would begin
immediately with the aim of completing it by the June 30 deadline.
EU
foreign policy chief Federica Mogherini said the United States and the
EU will lift all nuclear-related sanctions on Iran once the UN atomic
agency has verified that Tehran has stuck to the ground-breaking deal.
And the US said all past UN nuclear resolutions on Iran would also be lifted.
Kerry
said Iran's stocks of highly enriched uranium will be cut by 98 percent
for 15 years, while its unfinished Arak reactor will not produce
weapons-grade plutonium.
The Fordo facility, built deep
into a mountain, will remain open, however will not be used for
enrichment but for research and development.
The deal will
also see Iran reduce by roughly two-thirds -- to 6,104 from around
19,000 -- the number of uranium centrifuges, which can make fuel for
nuclear power but also the core of a nuclear bomb.
Iranian
negotiators had been under pressure from domestic hardliners not to
give too much away while also delivering on Rouhani's promise to win the
lifting of sanctions.
The so-called P5+1 group -- the
United States, Britain, China, France and Russia plus Germany -- hope
that the deal will make it virtually impossible for Iran to make nuclear
weapons.
Iran, one of the world's major oil producing
countries, has always denied seeking the atomic bomb, saying its
activities are for energy generation and research.
France,
which has taken a hawkish line during the negotiations, warned that
sanctions could be reimposed if Tehran does not fully keep its side of
the bargain.
"Sanctions that are lifted can be reimposed
if the deal is not applied," President Francois Hollande's office said
in a statement, adding that Paris would watch closely to ensure a
"credible" and "verifiable" final agreement that prevents Iran from
developing a nuclear weapon.
German Chancellor Angela
Merkel said the international community had never "been so close to an
agreement preventing Iran from having nuclear weapons".
Russia,
which built Iran's nuclear power plant, hailed the deal as a
recognition of Tehran's "unconditional right" to pursue a civilian
nuclear programme.
"A comprehensive, negotiated solution
to the Iranian nuclear issue will contribute to peace and stability in
the region and enable all countries to cooperate urgently to deal with
the many serious security challenges they face," UN chief Ban Ki-moon
said in a statement.
The Russian foreign ministry also
said the framework deal would have "a positive impact" on the security
situation in the Middle East.
Successful implementation of
the deal could put Iran and the United States on the road to better
relations after 35 years of animosity since the 1979-1981 hostage crisis
in Tehran.
US analyst Daryl Kimball of the Arms Control
Association said the parameters agreed so far could "lead to one of the
most consequential and far reaching nuclear nonproliferation
achievements in recent decades".
Obama needs a deal which
he can sell to hostile Republicans in Congress, who remain suspicious of
Iran's pledges and are threatening to push for new sanctions from April
14.
Republicans and US allies like Israel and Saudi
Arabia fear that if too much of Iran's nuclear programme is left intact,
it will still have the ability to obtain an atomic bomb.
Crude
oil prices fell in New York after the framework accord was announced,
with the US benchmark West Texas Intermediate for May delivery down 95
cents to $49.14 a barrel.