Secretary of State John Kerry said the United States will not let up its pressure on Iran over its disputed nuclear program despite recent diplomatic overtures between the two countries.
"We will pursue a
diplomatic initiative with eyes wide open," Kerry said in Rome during a
meeting Wednesday with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, "aware
it will be vital for Iran to live up to those standards other nations
that have nuclear programs live up to as they prove those programs are
indeed peaceful."
Despite a softening of
rhetoric on some fronts by the regime in Tehran, there have been fears
by other countries in the region that the United States might be too
quick to offer incentives to Iran in the latest round of negotiations
between Iran and the group known as the P5+1, which includes the five
permanent members of the United Nations Security Council and Germany.
Netanyahu, who has said
Iran's nuclear program poses an existential threat to Israel, was
cautious in his assessment of the current state of play.
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"Iran must not have nuclear weapon capability," he told Kerry. "I think no deal is better than a bad deal."
For Netanyahu, any deal
with Iran must include a prohibition on centrifuges that can be used to
enrich uranium to a weapons grade level, as well as the dismantling of a
plutonium heavy water plant in Arak that has yet to come on line.
"They should get rid of
the amassed fissile material, and they shouldn't have underground
nuclear facilities," Netanyahu said in reference to the Fordow facility
near the city of Qom, which was discovered in 2009.
Netanyahu is not alone in
his plea for the Obama administration to take a slow and cautious
approach in the latest round of negotiations.
Members from both parties
in Congress have urged the administration not to loosen any of the
sanctions that are choking Iran's economy prematurely. Legislation is
being drafted that could tighten the sanctions regime until a deal is
reached.
"No deal is better than a
bad deal," Kerry said echoing Netanyahu as the two began approximately
seven hours of talks about Iran, Syria, and the peace process with the
Palestinians. "But if this can be solved satisfactorily, diplomatically,
it is clearly better for everyone."
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