TEHRAN, Iran (AP) Hard-line Iranian lawmakers criticized a nuclear deal reached in Geneva last week, with one calling it a "poisoned chalice," but a majority of deputies who spoke Wednesday in a parliamentary hearing on the accord backed an initiative that appears to enjoy both wide public support and
Iran hard-liners criticize Geneva deal
Subscribe to listen
Heavy water reactors such as Arak produce a greater amount of byproduct plutonium, which can be used in nuclear weapons production if extracted by a special process. Iran has pledged not to pursue facilities that could separate the plutonium.
Speaking Wednesday, State Department spokeswoman Jen Psaki stressed that Zarif specifically noted capacity at the Arak site is not going to increase. She said nothing Zarif said implied a violation of the agreement.
"It means no nuclear fuel will be produced and no installations will be installed, but construction will continue there," she said. "We're not sure exactly what he means by 'construction,'" Psaki told reporters. "But there will be no work on the reactor itself, no work to prepare fuel for the reactor or do additional testing of the reactor."
For their part, Iranian hard-liners said that the deal placed overly sweeping restrictions on the Islamic Republic's nuclear activities.
Lawmaker Ruhollah Hosseinian said the deal was so vague and conditional that it may finally lead to a shutting down of Iran's uranium enrichment program, which can lead to material used in nuclear weapons. Iran denies Western claims that it is pursuing weapons and says the enriched uranium is needed for peaceful purposes.
"It practically tramples on Iran's enrichment rights ... Uranium enrichment restrictions in the final stage and constraints in the first stage mean that enrichment in Iran is headed toward self shut-down," he said.
"A chalice of poison has been given to the people but (the government) is trying to show it as a sweet drink through media manipulation," Hamid Rasaei said.
Most lawmakers however supported the deal as providing much-needed economic relief.
Zarif has argued that the deal has caused serious cracks in the sanctions regime imposed over Iranian nuclear activity and prevents the U.N. Security Council and world powers from imposing new ones.
Others government supporters say the angry reaction from Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, who called it a "historic mistake," shows it was a triumph.
Iran's ally Syria meanwhile says its President Bashar Assad telephoned Rouhani Wednesday, congratulating him for the nuclear deal.
A statement posted on Assad's official Facebook page said the Syrian president told Rouhani the agreement is a result of the Iranian leadership's "commitment to preserving Iranian sovereignty" and the "steadfastness of the Iranian people."