Almaty: US Secretary of State John Kerry has warned Iran that it must meet Western demands to stop enriching uranium. Talks between the Islamic Republic and world powers in Kazakhstan ended without any progress. The Dispatch news Desk (DND) reported.
Despite the fruitless negotiations in Almaty over the weekend, Kerry said in Istanbul on Sunday that the Obama administration remains committed to finding a diplomatic solution with Tehran, even as Israel ramps up rhetoric in calling for the West to present the Islamic Republic with a military ultimatum. “It is important to talk and to try to find common ground,” Kerry told reporters at a joint press conference with Turkish Foreign Minister Ahmet Davutoglu. “So we hope that out of Almaty will come a narrowing of some of the differences. We remain open and hopeful that a diplomatic solution can be found.”
But EU foreign affairs chief Catherin Ashton admitted on Saturday that during the two-day talks in the former Kazakh capital, the two sides did not come to an understanding and still remain “a considerable distance apart” on substantive issues. Ashton represents the so-called P5+1, made up of the five permanent UN Security Council members – Britain, China, France, Russia and the United States – plus Germany.
The EU and US are calling for Iran to stop all high-grade enrichment activity, which can be used to build a nuclear bomb, and allow international inspections. Iran, on the other hand, claims its program is for civilian purposes and has called for international sanctions to be lifted.
Kerry said that although the Obama administration favors diplomacy, talks are not “interminable.” “This is not an endless process,” said Kerry, who is on a 10-day diplomatic trip. “You can’t just talk for the sake of talking.” Meanwhile, Israeli Strategic Affairs Minister Yuval Steinitz told Israel Army Radio on Sunday that world powers should set a deadline of “a few weeks, a month” for military action against Iran, if it does not halt enrichment.