Kerry, Zarif to Meet as Iran Nuclear Talks Continue
Negotiators from Iran and a group of six world powers have given themselves until June 30 to agree on a final deal addressing Iran`s nuclear program and concerns that it could be used to develop nuclear weapons. Iran has long insisted its nuclear activity is peaceful, and wants the full repeal of related sanctions that have severely hurt its economy.
Critics of the talks, including Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, say the U.S. and its partners Britain, China, France, Russia and Germany are being too soft on Iran and would allow too much nuclear activity to continue while taking away the sanctions.
President Barack Obama has defended the provisions of the framework deal, emphasizing that sanctions could be reimposed if Iran failed to uphold its part of the agreement.
In a rare appearance Saturday at a meeting of the Republican Jewish Coalition, former President George W. Bush expressed his criticism, questioning the feasibility of putting the sanctions back into place.
The U.S. Senate is also considering a bill that would allow Congress to review the terms of the agreement before lifting any of the sanctions imposed by the legislature. It also calls for Obama to certify every 90 days that Iran is complying. The president has said he would sign the measure.