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West prepares to end sanctions as Iran deal adopted
By Dave Clark
Washington (AFP) Oct 19, 2015


Iran says ready to start 'huge task' of dismantling centrifuges
Tehran (AFP) Oct 18, 2015 - The "huge task" of disabling parts of Iran's nuclear infrastructure will probably start this week, a top official said Sunday as US President Barack Obama took steps to end sanctions.

Ali Akbar Salehi, head of Iran's nuclear agency, told state television he was awaiting President Hassan Rouhani's order to remove thousands of centrifuges from atomic sites at Natanz and Fordo.

The rendering of the centrifuges -- fast-spinning machines that enrich uranium -- was part of a July 14 deal, known as the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action, between Iran and six world powers to end a 13-year dispute over Tehran's atomic activities.

On Sunday, Obama ordered the US government to "take all appropriate additional measures to ensure the prompt and effective implementation of the US commitments set forth in the JCPOA".

The US measures will take effect upon confirmation by Secretary of State John Kerry that Iran has met its commitments under the accord, Obama said, likely at the end of 2015 or early 2016.

As well as slashing its number of centrifuges to around 6,000, Iran will have to satisfy the International Atomic Energy Agency that it has taken steps to ensure its Arak reactor and other installations cannot be used for military purposes.

The IAEA's final report on Iran is due by December 15.

"We will start our actions when the president gives the order," Salehi said of Rouhani, estimating that the work to comply with the JCPOA would take around two months.

"What we need to accomplish is a huge task. We hope to start this week or next week."

The July agreement won final approval in Iran on Wednesday.

In Tehran, some hardline lawmakers say Rouhani's government made too many concessions to the West. The deal also came despite fierce opposition from US and Israeli critics who say safeguards on Iran are not sufficiently robust.

Iran has always denied seeking a nuclear weapon. The accord is meant to ensure it never can through an inspection regime over 15 years.

EU adopts legislative framework for lifting Iran sanctions
Brussels (AFP) Oct 18, 2015 - The European Union on Sunday adopted the framework for lifting its sanctions against Iran, although the measure will only take effect once Tehran has met its obligations under a landmark nuclear deal, EU foreign policy chief Federica Mogherini said.

"This is another important milestone that brings us a step closer to the beginning of implementation of the (nuclear agreement agreed in July), to which we are strongly committed," Mogherini said in a joint statement with Iranian Foreign Minister Javad Zarif.

"Iran will now start the implementation of its nuclear-related commitments with the objective of full and effective completion," it added.

The EU announcement came shortly after President Barack Obama ordered the US government to also take steps towards lifting sanctions on Iran.

The procedures began 90 days after the UN Security Council endorsed the accord struck between six world powers and Tehran in Vienna on July 14, under which Iran agreed to curb its nuclear programme in return for relief from damaging economic sanctions.

The EU sanctions are expected to be dismantled "around the end of the year or early next year" after the International Atomic Energy Agency certifies that Iran has met its commitments, a Western diplomat told AFP on Friday.

The EU and US sanctions have proved very damaging, locking up billions in Iranian assets overseas and starving the oil-dependent economy of crucially needed technology and investment.

The United States and Europe began preparing to lift the trade sanctions that have hobbled the Iranian economy on Sunday, as a historic nuclear deal came into effect.

The procedure to lift the embargo began 90 days after the UN Security Council endorsed the accord signed in Vienna in July, a milestone referred to as "Adoption Day."

But foreign firms will not be able to resume ties with Iran's oil industry and banks right away -- sanctions will remain in place until Iran fulfills its end of the bargain.

The next stage in the process -- "implementation day" -- will only come when UN nuclear watchdog the IAEA confirms Iran has dramatically scaled back its nuclear program.

Iran said that lengthy process will probably start this week.

On Monday, envoys of the deal signatories -- Britain, China, France, Germany, Russia and the United States -- will meet in Vienna to form a commission to oversee the implementation of the accord.

Tehran will have to surrender or dilute the bulk of its enriched nuclear fuel stocks, dismantle most of its centrifuges and halt a reactor capable of making plutonium.

Only then will the sanctions "waivers" that US President Barack Obama ordered his administration to issue on Sunday come into effect and trade can begin to resume.

"Today marks an important milestone toward preventing Iran from obtaining a nuclear weapon and ensuring its nuclear program is exclusively peaceful going forward," Obama said in a statement.

US Secretary of State John Kerry, who played a central role in the painstaking negotiations between Iran and the West, added: "If fully implemented, it will bring unprecedented insight and accountability to Iran's nuclear program forever."

The European Union also adopted a legal framework for lifting sanctions imposed on Iran.

The accord "brings us a step closer to the beginning of implementation of the (July deal), to which we are strongly committed," EU foreign policy chief Federica Mogherini said in a joint statement with Iranian Foreign Minister Javad Zarif.

US Treasury Secretary Jacob Lew said: "As Iran begins taking its nuclear-related measures and the United States and our partners prepare to lift nuclear-related sanctions in response, we move one step closer to a successful JCPOA and a more secure international community," using the acronym for the nuclear accord.

- 'Huge task' -

Ali Akbar Salehi, head of Iran's nuclear agency, was awaiting President Hassan Rouhani's order to remove thousands of centrifuges from sites at Natanz and Fordo.

"What we need to accomplish is a huge task. We hope to start this week or next week," he told state television.

Dismantling the centrifuges, which enrich uranium, was part of the July 14 deal, known as the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action, between Iran and six world powers.

In addition to slashing the number of centrifuges at Natanz and Fordo to around 6,000, Iran will have to satisfy the IAEA that its Arak reactor cannot be used for military purposes.

China has agreed to work with Iran and the United States to "modernize" Arak so that it cannot produce plutonium, which can be used in a bomb, US officials said.

Iran has always denied seeking a nuclear weapon, which would dramatically alter the balance of power in an already unstable and war-torn Middle East region.

"We will start our actions when the president gives the order," Salehi said, estimating that the work to comply with the JCPOA would take around two months.

- Challenges remain -

With Iranian citizens restless for economic relief, Tehran has said it hopes "implementation day" will come quickly -- in less than two months -- but Washington is more cautious.

"For us it's important that it's done right, not that it's done quickly," a senior administration official told reporters. "We cannot imagine less than two months."

Some have voiced hope that, once the nuclear stand-off is out of the way, the United States and Iran can begin moves to improve relations in other domains.

But ties have, if anything, become more fraught, with Iran last week testing a ballistic missile and stepping up its military intervention to support Bashar al-Assad in Syria.

Hardliners in both the US Congress and the Iranian regime, opposed to a broader detente, continued to disparage the deal despite Sunday's milestone.

"The Obama administration's belief that this nuclear agreement can usher in a new era of partnership is a complete misread. It's sure tough to look at Iran's actions over the last three months -- let alone 35 years -- and think Tehran will live up to its end of the nuclear bargain," said Ed Royce, Republican chairman of the House Foreign Affairs Committee.

"If this is what the last 90 days look like, the next few years look like a disaster," he said in a statement on Sunday.

This week the United States will begin to issue waivers to companies seeking to trade with Iran in sectors touched by nuclear-related sanctions, such as transport, oil and banking.

"Those waivers will be out and issued so people will know what will be getting waived but it won't actually take effect until Iran completes its steps," an official said.

burs-dw/sg


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