"Whereas until now the P5+1 (the United States, France, Britain, Russia, China and Germany) had a very homogeneous attitude, in the past days representatives in the negotiations have put forward a certain number of different approaches between part of the 5+1 and our Russian partners," he told a parliamentary commission.
Fabius did not say what exactly the differences were between members of the P5+1, which has always presented a united front in negotiations with Iran on its nuclear programme.
Fabius said "none of the main issues" had so far been resolved, citing for instance Iran's capacities to enrich uranium, a process that produces nuclear fuel but also, at high purities, the core of an atomic bomb.
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