WASHINGTON (AFP) — Publicly, they are the best of friends working to seal a historic deal to stop Iran’s march to a nuclear bomb. But behind closed doors, diplomats from France and the United States barely hide their frustration.
For years, France has been viewed as the toughest member of the group of powers known as the P5+1, after feeling burned in previous pacts under which Tehran covertly continued to advance its atomic ambitions.
The P5+1 — Britain, China, France, Russia, the United States and Germany — go back to the negotiating table next week in Geneva having failed to meet a November 24 deadline for a deal.
They have set a new target date of June 30 to reach a pact that would end 12 years of protracted negotiations with the Islamic republic.
But despite public assertions of unity among the global powers, Western diplomats confirm there is a diplomatic fencing match behind the scenes between Paris and Washington.
One of France’s main concerns is the incomplete Arak heavy water reactor, which when it eventually comes online could be used to make plutonium for an atomic bomb.
Paris is said to have pushed for stringent inspections of Iran’s nuclear energy program, and a broad dismantling of facilities and centrifuges.
Amid great uncertainty over whether a deal is possible despite hours and hours of tense negotiations, this distrust between the two transatlantic allies could prove the weakest link in the P5+1 bloc.
Privately, American officials say there has been concern in Washington over the French position of publicly playing hardball, but then not backing up their words in the negotiations.
In November 2013, angered by US Secretary of State John Kerry’s sudden appearance at the talks in Geneva, French Foreign Minister Laurent Fabius showed up, talking tough against the proposed contours of a deal and seemingly threw a wrench in the works.
‘Robust’ deal’
As for the French, they are concerned that the Obama administration, under fire for its disjointed foreign policy, badly needs a success and despite its assertions to the contrary wants an Iran deal at almost any price.
“We want a robust agreement, not an agreement for the sake of an agreement,” a European diplomat said.
“We should not rush for a deal. It would be a mistake from the six [powers] to rush. The pressure is on Iran.”
During the most recent failed round of talks, French Ambassador to the US Gerard Araud tweeted that it was “a good poker game in Vienna. But, as usual, if you have the higher hand and keep your nerves, you will win.”
“As the French have amply demonstrated, Europe does not want a deal at any cost,” wrote Riccardo Alcaro, an expert with the Brookings Institution think tank.
“But of all the parties involved, the Europeans are probably the most determined to settle the Iranian nuclear issue. Indeed, they conceive their role in the negotiations as preventing the worst instincts of the Americans and the Iranians from spoiling the process.”
This time on his way to Vienna, Kerry took care to fully brief Fabius first in Paris, amid concern the French diplomat might resort to more public grandstanding that could scupper the delicate negotiations.
Indeed, in Geneva in 2013, the global powers left empty-handed after Fabius’s intervention, only reaching an interim deal two weeks later.
Grumbling
The former French ambassador to Iran, Francois Nicoullaud, told AFP that “fundamentally Fabius was not wrong to say a year ago that it was not a done deal.”
“But Kerry didn’t want to see such a scandal happen again and took care to make sure he kept everyone in the loop.
“I don’t think France is in a position to block” a deal,” he said, adding: “the French are not making any effort. They are just following, grumbling.”
US expert Kelsey Davenport, from the Arms Control Association, agreed.
“There are minor differences between the US and France on substantive elements. Both sides have admitted that,” she said.
“What is critical is that France and the United States share the same goals about what a good agreement must accomplish.”
Any deal “must block Iran’s uranium and plutonium pathways to the bomb and put in place stringent monitoring and verification to ensure that there are no covert activities and any deviation from an agreement is immediately detected,” added Davenport.

December 13, 2014 at 9:18 PM
I swear, all these stories about the Iran talks are the same thing over and over and over again. Over 12 years of talks, and while the leaders of Western countries have changed, the position of the bloodthirsty tyrant Ayatollah Khamenei has not.
Still the Iranians build nuclear bombs and intercontinental missiles while the hapless Western diplomats play the same tired game on Iran’s terms.
Only the Israelis can put an end to this never ending farce.
They should have done so years ago, but better late than never.
December 14, 2014 at 6:49 AM
I may be wrong, but I am struck by the impression that a great deal of the wrangling going on with regards to Iran, is connected at the hip to the final answer to one question: who is gonna do business with whom?
Let’ see…France was selling a nuclear reactor to Iraq, and doing a great deal of business with the Saddam regime.
Germany, I believe, has in the past done a great deal of business with the Islamic Republic, continues to do business with the Islamic Republic, and would like to do EVEN MORE business, in the future, with, the Islamic Republic!
Italy, over in the Maghreb, is welded at the hip to enterprise in Libya.
The USA, has, for a long time, been left out in the cold with regards to the aforementioned business communities, but now (in the aftermath of the disastrous Arab Spring) has the opportunity to ingratiate herself and embed lasting commercial connections within the Arab/Islamic sphere.
That brings me, to…….Israel; that pesky little Jewish fly in the ointment who stubbornly refuses to fall on her own sword, so that all the good folks who’d like to sell stuff to the Arabs and Persians, can proceed with their businesses, unhindered.
When, eventually, this all gets sorted out (I believe), someone will dance with Israel. The lowest of the low will get their business deals in the Arab/Islamic world. Someone will see value in bringing Israel along to the dance. The courting of Israel, this cynic believes, will have more to do with the advantages of bring at the middle east bazaar with SOMEONE, rather than not being present.
In the eyes of the, “international community”, Israel is the homely girl that no one asks to dance, but eventually, someone has no other alternative.
So, will it be the USA?, France, Germany (doubt it), UK, Russia, or an heretofore outsider such as India, or China, (who both may now be ready to step up to the big leagues of international commerce and geo-strategic competition), that takes Israel for a junior partner?
Israel brings good things to the table, and in relation to any other country, Israel is either as honorable or (quite often) more honorable a nation. Israel is technologically advanced, and she has a strong military.
December 14, 2014 at 4:00 PM
You’re right IRA. Israel does bring good things to the table. As a result, Israel is an important trading partner with the USA. They also enjoy ‘free trade status’ as well. For some interesting statistics, please check out the following link to the Office of the US Trade Representative site regarding our trade relations with Israel.
http://www.ustr.gov/countries-regions/europe-middle-east/middle-east/north-africa/israel