World powers opened nuclear talks with Iran today with Tehran set to unveil a roadmap for negotiations under new President Hassan Rouhani that it says could yield a deal in a year.
The two-day meeting in Geneva ends a six-month hiatus over the Islamic republic's refusal to curb uranium enrichment in exchange for easing punishing international sanctions.
Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif was to present Iran's stance to the so-called P5+1 group of the United States, Britain, France, China and Russia plus Germany.
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Zarif, who has said he hoped the Geneva talks would least sketch out a "roadmap" for further higher-level talks, did not did not go into details.
But he said the initial step could be achieved "within a month, or two, or even less".
Negotiators have however downplayed the chances of a major breakthrough, despite hopes raised since conservative Mahmoud Ahmadinejad wrapped up two four-year terms as Iran's president.
Rouhani, who took office in August, has promised transparency on the nuclear programme and engagement to eventually lift the trade embargo that is strangling Iran's economy by hitting oil exports and access to global banking.
But Iran's archfoe Israel has repeatedly warned the world not to fall for "sweet talk" from Rouhani, and Western negotiators have insisted they are not naive.
European Union foreign policy chief Catherine Ashton, who is chairing the talks, said she had "cautious optimism but a real sense of determination".
Officials said the talks, taking place at the UN's European base in Geneva, were to be conducted in English for the first time.
A senior US administration official said detail was the key, and noted that Washington's team included sanctions specialists.
"We are quite ready to move. But it depends what they put on the table," the official told reporters in Geneva.
"We are hopeful, but that has to be tested with concrete, verifiable actions," the official said.
"In the past, Iran has taken the negotiated time and just kept moving forward with its nuclear programme. We cannot allow that to be the case."
Zarif admitted to difficulties in the negotiations, on hold since a round in April in Kazakhstan where Iran refused to curb some sensitive enrichment activities in exchange for a moderate relief of sanctions.
"The nuclear issue cannot be resolved in one session, as mistrust has been accumulated over years," he said.
"I am not pessimistic about the talks, but we need to see the good intentions and political will of the other side in action," he said.
Western powers and Israel suspect Iran is trying to develop the atomic bomb, a claim vehemently denied by Tehran which insists its nuclear programme is for peaceful purposes.