On January 14, Secretary of State John Kerry and Iranian Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif held intensive meetings in Geneva on the eve of nuclear talks between Iran and the world’s six major powers—Britain, China, France, Germany, Russia and the United States. The session was intended to “show the readiness of the two parties to move forward to speed up the [negotiations] process,” Zarif told reporters before meeting Kerry. “All issues are hard until we resolve them.”
#Iran's FM Javad #Zarif joking with reporters before meeting with John #Kerry in #Geneva pic.twitter.com/Sp8IXF6nQa via @m_bizar
— Alireza Taba (@alirezat) January 14, 2015
Zarif and Kerry also held unscheduled late-night meeting.
On January 16, the two met again in Paris. The two had previously scheduled meetings with others, but they carved out time to meet again to continue closing gaps.
#Picture of #Zarif & #Kerry meeting today in #Paris. #NuclearTalks #IranTalks #IranTalksParis #IranNuclearTalks pic.twitter.com/HyrhAUClXv
— Nuclear Talks (@NuclearTalks) January 16, 2015
Photo credits: U.S. State Department via Flickr