It looks like there’s hope for an Iranian nuke deal, after all.
Secretary of State John Kerry arrived in Geneva on Friday, where intense nuclear negotiations are already underway between Iran and the U.S., Britain, France, China, Russia and Germany.
Kerry is set to meet with Iran’s Foreign Minister Javad Zarif, and his visit is being seen as the strongest sign yet that a deal could be on the horizon. Zarif and a senior American official told NBC News on Thursday that Iran may sign off on an agreement as early as Friday, which would be the first real thaw in the U.S. and Iran’s icy relationship over the last 35 years.
Upon his arrival in Geneva, Kerry told reporters that there’s no deal yet. “I want to emphasize there are some very important issues on the table that are unresolved” but that he hoped “we can narrow some differences.”
When asked about nuclear talks with Iran, President Obama told NBC News’ Chuck Todd on Thursday that he’s open to a “phased agreement,” in which the U.S. rolls back some sanctions commensurate with verification about Tehran’s activities. The U.S., he said would have to verify that the Iranian nuclear program was for peaceful energy purposes.
The U.S., he stressed, would not take military action off the table in the event that Iran does not freeze its nuclear activities. Obama said he would keep a “sanctions architecture in place” so that if Iran failed to follow through, the international community can “crank that dial back up.”









