No nuclear deal unless all sanctions on Iran lifted: Khamenei support President Rouhani’s stance

Iran, Rouhani, Khameini, Nuclear, Iran nuke deal, iran nuclear deal, nuclear talk switzerland, Iran president, World News Khamenei has backed the negotiating team despite criticism of the process from hard-liners.

Iran is staking out a tough bargaining stance for the final phase of nuclear negotiations, with both its supreme leader and its moderate president saying Thursday that any deal must include an immediate lifting of withering sanctions.

While that might be popular domestically, it could be setting the bar too high for what negotiators will be able to deliver in the final deal they hope to reach by June 30.

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Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei will have the final say on whether Iran agrees to a deal that could transform its relationship with the wider world — and he is keeping everyone guessing.

In his first comments on last week’s deal, Khamenei told a gathering of religious poets on Thursday that he “is neither for nor against” it. His reasoning was matter-of-fact: Because the agreement was only the framework of a final deal and not the accord itself, “nothing has been done yet,” he said.

“What has happened so far neither guarantees a deal… nor does it guarantee the content of a deal,” he said. “It doesn’t even guarantee the talks will go on until the end and will lead to a deal.”

Khamenei did say, however, that the punitive “sanctions should be lifted completely, on the very day of the deal” — something that has not been agreed upon.

He cautioned that the six world powers — the five permanent UN Security Council members and Germany — are “not to be trusted” and may try “to limit Iran” in further talks.

And he urged Iranian negotiators not to accept any “unconventional inspections” of Iran’s nuclear facilities, stressing that the inspection of military facilities would not be permitted.

At the same time, however, he said a successful deal would show that negotiations are possible on other issues beyond the nuclear program.

Khamenei has backed the negotiating team despite criticism of the process from hard-liners. And this week, the negotiators won a major endorsement from the chief of Iran’s Revolutionary Guard, Gen. Mohammad Ali Jafari, who praised their work “in defending the rights of the Iranian nation.”

The supreme leader’s caution seems designed to manage public expectations by characterizing the deal as just one more step on the road to an agreement whose outcome is far from certain.

But it also means the negotiations have his continued support.

“If you read between the lines, the supreme leader said he is willing to approve an extension of the talks,” said Haleh Esfandiari, who directs the Middle East program at the Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars.

“If he was not interested in the negotiations, he would have just said ‘we did what we could’ and just stop,” she said.

Iran’s President Hassan Rouhani, a relative moderate, meanwhile aimed high during a ceremony Thursday marking Iran’s nuclear technology day, which celebrates

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