"The negotiations are very tough and complicated and there are highs and lows," Iranian Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif said today before going into talks in Switzerland with top US diplomat John Kerry.
"Our feeling is that we can definitely reach a deal but that depends on the political will of the other side," he told Iranian media.
This followed an extraordinary appeal by Iran's president to world leaders yesterday that saw him write a letter to US President Barack Obama and phone his counterparts in Britain, China, France and Russia.
The negotiations in Lausanne are aimed at agreeing by Tuesday the main outlines of a deal that world powers hope will make an Iranian drive to develop nuclear weapons all but impossible.
A full deal, capping more than a decade of tensions over Iran's atomic ambitions and a year and a half of intense negotiations from New York to Vienna to Oman, is then meant to be rounded out with complex technical agreements by June 30.
But both Iran and France have criticised the two-step process, with France's US ambassador calling it a "bad tactic".
A Western diplomat involved in the talks said yesterday that something vague and "wishy-washy" at the end of this round would not be sufficient.
"Sometimes the differences of opinion on the other side make for contradictory positions," Zarif said today.
Britain's foreign office confirmed Foreign Secretary Philip Hammond would arrive in Lausanne this weekend, joining France's hawkish Laurent Fabius who is expected Saturday morning, according to Paris.
