But as uncertainty persists over talks aimed at ending the 12-year standoff on Iran's disputed atomic programme, hurdles to an agreement are stacking up.
In Washington, lawmakers are considering imposing new sanctions on Tehran despite calls from the White House to give the negotiations more time.
Hardline Iranian MPs have responded with threats of their own and are drafting two bills that would undermine the talks.
With the going already tough -- the level of uranium enrichment Iran can conduct and a timetable for lifting sanctions are said to be blocking a deal -- analysts say pressure is being ratcheted up.
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"With time, they will gain further ammunition."
Although the June 30 deadline for a final agreement between Iran and the P5+1 powers -- Britain, China, France, Russia and the US plus Germany -- is some way off, two earlier deadlines were missed.
In the Iranian capital, officials say the US and other world powers need to show more flexibility in nailing down the hard details of a deal.
Iran's negotiators have given no indication a compromise is in the offing and supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, who has the final word, last month voiced doubt that the US could be trusted.
The biggest threat, they say, is the possibility of new US sanctions on Iran, which Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif has said would effectively "torpedo" the talks.
Such an outcome is likely the aim of Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu's address to the US Congress about Iran's nuclear efforts on March 3.
In a signal of White House disapproval at such a high- profile and untimely intervention -- an outline agreement with Iran is due on March 31 -- President Barack Obama will not meet Netanyahu.
If they can convince enough Democrats in the Republican-controlled Congress to back sanctions, they could have the super-majority needed to pass veto-proof legislation.