In a speech to parliament, Mohammad Javad Zarif emphasised that last week’s agreement would secure the lifting in coming months of UN and Western sanctions imposed on Iran over its nuclear programme. In return, Iran has agreed to put curbs on its atomic activities for at least a decade but it will continue to enrich uranium and be allowed to pursue research and development of more modern nuclear technology.
The deal and restrictions, including a more rigorous inspection regime, aim to remove Western concerns that Iran is seeking an atomic bomb - an allegation it has always denied.
Zarif, who led Iran’s negotiating team, was feted in street celebrations in Tehran after the deal was announced last Tuesday, but members of the conservative-dominated parliament have proved a tougher sell. In a sign of their scepticism, just days before the final negotiations started in Vienna, lawmakers passed a new law which they said was to defend the nuclear programme, but which the government opposed.
Some hardliners in parliament have railed against the diplomacy, arguing that too many concessions were made. But Zarif said that the long-running talks could never have satisfied Iran’s or the West’s every demand.
“We should not forget that any deal is a give and take and each side gives up part of its demands to realise the more important part until what has been given and received is balanced,” he said.