Obama’s Lead Negotiator Won’t Say How Much Notice Iran Will Get for Inspections

‘We are now negotiating those details’

BRZEZINSKI: Joining us now from the State Department undersecretary for political affairs Wendy Sherman. Wendy was the lead negotiator, lead American negotiator in the talks with Iran. It is great to have you. Congratulations, by the way. 
SHERMAN: Well thank you, Mika. 
. . .
SCARBOROUGH: How much notice under this framework is there an understanding that we have to give Iran? Do they have a day, a week, a month to let inspectors in? 
SHERMAN: Well, I’m not going to go into the specific details of each and every element of this negotiation because I want — although I accept Mika’s nice congratulation, in fact, we do not yet have an agreement or an understanding as the lawyers call it. What we have is a framework. We are now negotiating those details, those details are absolutely crucial for all of the reasons that you all are discussing. And we have until June 30th to reach that. What we wanted to do and the instructions we had from the president is to get a framework and where we know at least the top line, and actually we got several more lines, of each of the major elements so that I, in fact, can tell congress, I, in fact, can tell the American people that we can move ahead. 
SCARBOROUGH: So what is your understanding of the framework and what it means as far as inspections go? 
SHERMAN: I think what the framework means is we will have the access we need to ensure that we have the time to make the decisions that we need. It’s why the one-year breakout time that we’ve talked about so much, the amount of time that it would take them to get enough fissile material for a nuclear weapon is so critical. Because in a year you have more than enough time to make other decisions about sanctions or about other kinds of actions, to make sure that America’s national security and the world’s national security is indeed secure.

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