Iranian foreign minister
Mohammad Javad Zarif stated that the agreement ensures Iran's right to enrich. U.S. Secretary of State
John Kerry, who led the American negotiation team, responded saying that: "There is no inherent right to enrich," and that "And everywhere in this particular agreement it states that they could only do that by mutual agreement, and nothing is agreed on until everything is agreed on." Russian foreign minister
Sergey Lavrov also stated that the agreement recognized Iran's right to enrichment, so long as the program is under IAEA control. Israeli foreign minister
Avigdor Lieberman agreed with this assessment of the language in the agreement, although he was displeased by it.
Lebanon also hailed the agreement, while emphasizing that Israel should also sign the
NPT and rid itself of its
nuclear weapons arsenal.
Turkey,
India and
Pakistan have also welcomed the framework agreement. In a reference to Israel's arsenal of nuclear weapons, Saudi Arabia and Qatar both advocated a comprehensive solution to Iran's nuclear issue which would leave the entire Middle East free of nuclear weapons. Reaction from
Israeli government politicians was negative. Prime Minister
Benjamin Netanyahu called the accord a "historic mistake," and intelligence minister
Yuval Steinitz compared it to
failed nuclear negotiations with North Korea. Considering the way Washington handled the deal with Iran
The Jerusalem Post questioned whether Netanyahu would "place Israel's security in the hands of US guarantees". Leader of the opposition
Isaac Herzog criticized Netanyahu's reaction as bad for Israel's relations with the United States, although Herzog also said that Obama was partly to blame for not communicating more closely with Israel. Former
Israeli military intelligence chiefs
Amos Yadlin and
Aharon Ze'evi-Farkash also criticized Netanyahu's reaction as damaging to U.S. relations. The former head of the
Israeli National Security Council Yaakov Amidror argued the agreement failed to achieve anything significant and came to the conclusion that it "represents a failure, not a triumph, of diplomacy".
Al Jazeera argued that
Saudi Arabia,
a regional rival of Iran, welcomed the agreement. The Saudi cabinet released a statement which read, in part: "The government of the kingdom sees that if there was goodwill, this agreement could represent a preliminary step towards a comprehensive solution to the Iranian nuclear program" and could eventually lead "to the removal of weapons of mass destruction, especially nuclear weapons, from the Middle East and the Persian Gulf region".
The Daily Telegraph reported that Nawaf Obaid, a senior advisor to the Saudi royal family, criticized the way the deal was achieved: "We were lied to, things were hidden from us". Reaction from the
U.S. Congress was mixed. House Majority Leader
Eric Cantor and
Peter King were sharply critical of the agreement. Democrats
Nancy Pelosi and
Adam Smith were more positive. Speaker
John Boehner and Democrat
Eliot Engel were cautious. Reactions from
Canada were "skeptical", with
Minister of Foreign Affairs John Baird saying Iran "has not earned the right to have the benefit of the doubt." UN Secretary General
Ban Ki-moon hailed the interim agreement as the potential "beginnings of a historic agreement." The
American Israel Public Affairs Committee reacted skeptically to the agreement and urged preparation of sanctions legislation in Congress in case it failed, but fell short of calling for new sanctions immediately. Other non-partisan pro-Israel groups, including the
Anti-Defamation League and the
American Jewish Committee, were cautiously welcoming of the agreement after being briefed by White House officials. , German Minister of Foreign Affairs
Guido Westerwelle, EU High Commissioner
Catherine Ashton, Iranian Foreign Minister
Javad Zarif, Chinese Foreign Minister
Wang Yi, US Secretary of State
John Kerry, Russian Minister of Foreign Affairs
Sergey Lavrov, and French Foreign Minister
Laurent Fabius at a news conference at the conclusion of the negotiations. ==Implementation==