Reaching a nuclear deal with P5+1 should be a matter of “months, not years” the Iranian president Hassan Rouhani said in an interview with the Washington Post, indicating that he is ready to come to terms within a three-month timetable.
Iran wants to move forward with negotiations very quickly and
find a resolution on nuclear issues as soon as possible, the
president told Post contributor David Ignatius. Rouhani
reiterated that Iran’s supreme leader, Ali Khamenei, fully
empowered him to “finalize the nuclear talks.”
According to Rouhani, Iran is ready to offer unprecedented
transparency of its nuclear facilities and may allow the
International Atomic Energy Agency to assess their “possible
military dimensions” to prove its nuclear program is peaceful
and not aimed at building a bomb.
The Iranian president declared his readiness to immediately engage in result-oriented talks during his speech at the UN General Assembly the day prior.
While the West consistently suspects the military nature of Iran’s nuclear program, Rouhani stressed that “nuclear weapons and other weapons of mass destruction have no place in Iran's security and defense doctrine, and contradict our fundamental religious and ethical convictions.”
Iran and the P5+1 (which refers to the five members of the Security Council plus Germany) have held numerous rounds of negotiations beginning in 2006 surrounding Tehran’s nuclear energy program.
Their latest round of negotiations wrapped up in April in Almaty,
Kazakhstan. An earlier round of negotiations was held in the
Kazakh city in February.
The latest proposal included a call for Iran
to halt all 20 per cent enrichment activities and for Tehran to
transfer part of its stockpile of 20 per cent enriched uranium to
a third country under IAEA supervision. It also urged Iran to
suspend all operations at its Fordow facility.
Tehran has always rejected such claims, which have resulted in
crippling UN-imposed economic sanctions, maintaining that it is a
member of the Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT) and the
International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA), and therefore has the
inalienable right to develop nuclear energy for peaceful
purposes.
On Tuesday, after widespread anticipation of a possible meeting,
US President Barack Obama failed to greet Iran’s President
Rouhani at the United Nations in New York. In his speech to the
UN, Obama challenged Iran to take concrete steps
toward resolving Iran's dispute with the West.