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Obama administration will never walk away from the negotiating table with Iran

On Monday, the word was that the West's negotiations with Iran weren't going well: "The mood of the talks has gone from optimistic weeks ago, as Iran made concessions on items such as the future of its Arak nuclear reactor, to pessimistic in recent days as it becomes clear a giant gap remains on the crucial question of how much capacity Iran will retain to enrich uranium for what it insists is a peaceful nuclear program."

Yet as the deadline approached, President Obama and his team have decided things are going well enough to extend the deadline . .
New York Times: http://www.nytimes.com/2014/07/17/world/obama-hints-at-extension-for-iran-nuclear-talks.html?_r=0http://www.nytimes.com/2014/07/17/world/obama-hints-at-extension-for-iran-nuclear-talks.html?_r=0

WASHINGTON — President Obama said Wednesday that there had been “real progress in several areas” in negotiations with Iran over its disputed nuclear program, and he hinted that he might extend the talks beyond the deadline on Sunday in order to reach a final agreement.

“We have a credible way forward,” Mr. Obama told reporters during a short briefing at the White House, although he said there were some “significant gaps” between the two sides and more work to do before a deal could be struck.
If you're always willing to extend the deadline, then it's not really a deadline, is it? On paper, we're watching negotiations between two parties with diametrically opposed interests -- we want the Iranians to have as little of a nuclear program as possible; they want one as big (and easily switched to military applications) as possible. But in practice, we've got two parties with the same interest: the Obama administration wants negotiations to continue so they can claim their approach is working, and the Iranians want negotiations to continue so that their program keeps advancing and those centrifuges keep spinning. So both sides want the talks to go on indefinitely. At this point, we're negotiating about the conditions for continuing negotiations.

What would it take for President Obama, John Kerry, and the rest of his administration to conclude the Iranian guys aren't serious about a deal, they're stalling for time, and the U.S. is playing into their hands by continuing negotiations?

It seems that as long as the Iranians don't reach across the table and behead the other negotiators, Obama and Kerry are willing to give them the benefit of the doubt. :rolleyes:
 
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exscentric

Well-Known Member
Site Supporter
"If you're always willing to extend the deadline, then it's not really a deadline, is it? "

Kinda like a line in the sand isn't a line in the sand, whether a red one or not :)
 

carpro

Well-Known Member
Site Supporter
Obama is an idiot.

If history has taught us anything at all, it is that it is the height of folly to negotiate with Iran.

They never honor their commitments.
 
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