According to BBC, Iran and six world powers are starting the first round
of talks on a long-term agreement on Tehran’s controversial nuclear program.
The talks in Vienna aim
to build on November's interim deal, in which Iran agreed to curb uranium
enrichment in return for partial sanctions relief.
Ahead of the meeting,
both Iran and the US downplayed hopes of a quick breakthrough.
The West suspects Iran
of trying to build nuclear arms. Tehran denies this.
The talks between Iran
and Britain, China, France, Germany, Russia and the US are due to open at 11:00
(10:00 GMT) in the Austrian capital.
The West wants Iran to
sharply scale back its sensitive nuclear activities to ensure that it cannot
quickly assemble an atomic bomb.
But Tehran says its
nuclear work is purely peaceful and will continue. It also wants an end to the
sanctions that have battered its economy.
It took months of very
hard bargaining for the two sides to agree to negotiate a final deal, the BBC's
Bethany Bell in Vienna reports.
She adds that the talk
will be a first test of that resolve.
On Monday, Iran's
Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei said the Vienna talks "will not lead
anywhere", in a statement posted on his website.
But he added: "What
our officials started will continue. We will not renege. I have no
opposition."
Meanwhile, a senior US
administration official also acknowledged that it would be a "complicated,
difficult and lengthy process", Reuters reports.
The two sides have until
19 July to find a comprehensive solution.