اوقات شرعی تهران
اذان صبح ۰۵:۳۹:۱۵
اذان ظهر ۱۲:۰۳:۳۳
اذان مغرب ۱۷:۱۵:۰۵
طلوع آفتاب ۰۷:۱۰:۲۰
غروب آفتاب ۱۶:۵۴:۴۷
نیمه شب ۲۳:۱۷:۳۱
۱۳۹۲/۰۹/۰۵ - ۰۷:۵۴

Iran: Geneva Deal Does Not Mean Blind Trust in West

Iranian Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif underlined that Tehran will keep its eyes wide-open to see if the Group 5+1 (the five permanent UN Security Council members plus Germany) complies with the terms of the agreement the two sides signed in Geneva on Sunday.

Iran: Geneva Deal Does Not Mean Blind Trust in West

 

 
Addressing a ceremony in the Atomic Energy Organization of Iran (AEOI) in Tehran on Monday, Zarif pointed to the success of the country's negotiating team in the Geneva talks with the six world powers (the US, Russia, China, France, Britain and Germany), and said, “Negotiations do not mean blind trust and we will do our best to reach a final solution because we shouldn’t lose this opportunity.”
 
The Iranian foreign minister pointed to Israel’s animosity with Iran and fury of the Israeli leader over the victory of Iran’s diplomacy in Geneva talks, and said, “In these negotiations we want to build the trust of the world in the fact that we are not after nuclear weapons; so why have the enemies been terrified in such a way and why are they crying out?”
 
In similar remarks on Sunday, AEOI Chief Ali Akbar Salehi cautioned that Tehran will now start to check the moves of the world powers to see if they comply with the undertakings they have accepted under the Geneva deal.
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هفته نامه الکترونیکی
هفته‌نامه الکترونیکی سراج۲۴ - شماره ۲۶۷
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