Rouhani: All happy about deal except Israel, US hard-liners


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TEHRAN, Iran (AP) — Iran's President Hassan Rouhani said Sunday that the official implementation of the landmark deal reached between Tehran and six world powers has satisfied all parties except radical extremists.

Speaking before the parliament in comments broadcast live on state television, Rouhani said, "In (implementing) the deal, all are happy except Zionists, warmongers, sowers of discord among Islamic nations and extremists in the U.S. The rest are happy."

Rouhani said the deal has "opened new windows for engagement with the world."

A strong supporter of the agreement, Rouhani sent out a celebratory tweet calling it a "glorious victory" late Saturday night while the speeches in Vienna were still taking place.

Rouhani also said the deal was a win for all negotiating parties and all factions inside Iran. "Nobody has been defeated in the deal neither inside the country nor the countries that were negotiating with us," he said, referring to the United States, Britain, France, Russia, China and Germany.

Rouhani said Iran should use the expected influx of money and investments to spark the "economic mutation" of the country, creating jobs and enhancing quality-of-life for Iranian citizens. Iran has been suffering double-digit inflation and unemployment rates for years.

He also said Iran now needs political tranquility to best benefit from the new economic reality. "All should prevent any domestic and foreign trivialities that thwart us," he said. "Any irrelevant and diverting dispute is against national expedience."

Rouhani said his country needs up to $50 billion in foreign investment per year to reach its goal of eight-percent annual growth.

For Iran, long out in the economic cold over its contested atomic program, implementing the nuclear deal will be a welcome thaw.

More than $30 billion in assets overseas will become immediately available to the Islamic Republic. Official Iranian reports have set the total amount of frozen Iranian assets overseas at $100 billion.

A European oil embargo on Iran will end. Already, some 38 million barrels of oil are in Iran's floating reserves, ready to enter the market, according to the International Energy Agency.

Celebrations in Tehran were relatively muted at first, because the Vienna implementation announcement came well after midnight. But on Sunday, many Tehran residents expressed optimism about Iran's future economic prospects.

"Unbelievable! This is a day without sanction after years," said taxi driver Reza Khoei. "I lost my technical job in a petrochemical complex in south of Iran because of the damn sanctions."

Fahimeh Lotfi, a housewife and mother of two, said, "I am very happy. Now we are like other countries. No more will we to go to bed every night while worrying about the worsening situation. Bravo Rouhani!"

Hassan Dehghani, a 26-year-old street sweeper, said "I hope this helps the municipality to pay my salary on time. Sometimes they pay us with months of delay."

But not everyone was enthused about the agreement, which limits Iran's nuclear program in exchange for the lifting of sanctions. The deal is designed with so-called "snap-back" elements that can quickly restore sanctions if Iran is judged to be in violation of its obligations.

Tehran resident Hossein Barati angrily asked, "If America restores the sanctions, can Iran restore its nuclear program? No it can't! They dismantled all the centrifuges. How many years will it take Iran to restore its program?"

Tehran newspapers largely welcomed the implementation of the deal.

The state-owned IRAN daily wrote on its front-page, "The collapse of sanctions." The pro-reform Shargh daily, allocated part of its front page to pictures of Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif and European Union foreign policy chief Federica Mogherini with the headline: "Now, without sanctions."

Even the hard-line Kayhan daily remained impartial and said, "It is the time of implementation of promises," by the West.

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