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NUKEWARS
Iranian diplomacy logs on to banned social media
By Arthur MacMillan
Tehran (AFP) July 9, 2015


Western powers changing positions in nuclear talks: Iran
Vienna (AFP) July 9, 2015 - Western powers have been changing their positions in nuclear talks, a senior Iranian official said late Thursday, saying high-stakes negotiations in Vienna could "go either way".

"We see certain changes in the positions particularly just last night... on a lot of issues unfortunately," the official said on condition of anonymity at the end of a 13th day of talks that have already missed two deadlines.

"There was an approach that was acceptable... but then all of sudden people came up with some view for changing ideas, and this makes it rather difficult," the official said.

"It could go either way, this can be a small bridge in the negotiations, it can be a major setback," he said, adding however that he believed US Secretary of State John Kerry is "serious".

"I believe that a comprehensive agreement is within reach, it just requires people to abandon unnecessary or illusional objectives and just move forward with what is at hand and what is achievable," he said.

The official also accused Western countries of going back on parts of a framework accord agreed in Lausanne, Switzerland in April, which the current talks are aimed at finalising.

"People have decided to go back on some of the elements of Lausanne," the official said.

He also complained that Iran was not facing a united negotiating position from the six powers -- the United States, China, Russia, Britain, France and Germany.

"It's not a multilateral negotiations. It looks like you're doing five bilaterals. Every country has their red line some times, it's interesting," the official said.

There is "one red line for the US, one red line for the UK, one red line for France, one red line for Germany," he said.

"I don't think Iran... needs to make political decisions. I think the United States needs to make serious decisions," he said. "What is lacking is exactly the political decision that is needed on the other side."

The official also said there was a split among the six powers over the lifting of a UN arms embargo on Iran, with China and Russia supporting Iran's position.

"That's been our position, that's been Russia's position, that's been China's position and that is requirement and one way or another something of that nature needs to be achieved."

They are among the world's most popular websites and are vital diplomatic channels for Iranian officials involved in the nuclear talks. Yet Twitter, Facebook and YouTube remain banned in Iran.

While Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif leads the way on social media -- his Twitter account has "Verified" blue tick status -- he is far from alone in seeing its benefits.

Aides to President Hassan Rouhani tweet regularly on his behalf, as do officials from supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei's office -- most recently to restate Iran's "red lines" for a nuclear deal.

This happens despite Twitter, Facebook and YouTube being among hundreds of sites that ordinary Iranians cannot access unless they install illegal software on their computers, smartphones and tablets.

Iranian authorities filter access, citing inappropriate content as the reason for censorship. The restrictions are widely seen as outdated -- Rouhani wants to remove them and last year vetoed a plan to filter the hugely popular WhatsApp messaging service.

Internet use is growing every year, with 45 million of Iran's 78 million population online regularly. The contradictions of censorship policies "no longer raise eyebrows, except those belonging to foreigners," according to Hooman Majd, an Iranian-American journalist and author of several books on modern Iran.

"Any sophisticated politician -- and Zarif is certainly sophisticated -- understands that social media plays a big part in establishing a narrative," he said, noting that the minister uses Facebook in Farsi to message Iranians and Twitter in English to match diplomatic counterparts such as US Secretary of State John Kerry.

"I don't think he thinks too hard about the contradiction," Majd, who is covering the epic talks in Vienna for America's NBC News network, said of Zarif.

- Bid to 'win the public mind' -

"It is widely recognised, and conceded by the authorities, that Facebook has millions of Iranian members," he added.

As if to prove Twitter's usefulness again, Zarif used it Thursday just moments before Kerry told reporters he was prepared to "call an end" to the talks in Vienna if "tough decisions" are not made.

"We're working hard, but not rushed, to get the job done. Mark my words; you can't change horses in the middle of a stream," Zarif tweeted, adding the main #IranTalksVienna hashtag.

Online video sharing has also played a part. At talks on July 3, Zarif used YouTube to set out Iran's position in the talks, just as he did before an earlier round of negotiations in 2014.

Last week's video extended a promise of greater cooperation from Iran on global problems such as the Islamic State group, if a nuclear deal were reached.

In English, Zarif said: "Getting to yes requires the courage to compromise, the self-confidence to be flexible, the maturity to be reasonable. Our common threat today is the growing menace of violent extremism and outright barbarism."

Such direct diplomacy complements use of traditional media. To get his message across, Zarif has written columns for The New York Times and Financial Times urging a deal.

By doing so he can shape the debate, said Abas Aslani, a well-known Iranian journalist covering the nuclear talks in Vienna.

"Often in politics the narrative of an event is much more important that the event itself," said Aslani, acknowledging that cheap and easily available VPNs (Virtual Private Networks) neuter censorship.

"Those who play a more active and influential role in different kinds of media are expected to win the public mind," he said of Zarif.

"The presence of Iranian officials in media, traditional and new media, not only shouldn't be limited but also expanded."


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