Mr Kerry said the US and other powers had
talked to Iran: "more in 30 hours than we have in those prior 30
years"
Secretary of State
John Kerry has told US lawmakers any new sanctions against Iran
would risk ruining talks over Tehran's nuclear programme.
He told a Senate banking committee that the US might lose
negotiating partners if it imposed economic penalties.
The panel has been considering a fresh package but legislators
are divided on the measure.
Mr Kerry has told the BBC that Iran and world powers had come
"extremely close" to a deal at the weekend.
Before Wednesday's closed-door meeting with senators,
Washington's top diplomat told reporters: "What we're asking
everybody to do is calm down, look hard at what can be achieved and
what the realities are."
None of the differences between the so-called P5+1 - the US, UK,
France, Russia and China plus Germany - and Iran over its nuclear
programme are big enough to prevent agreement, Mr Kerry has
previously said.
Moving too quickly?
With the negotiators due to meet again on 20 November, both
Republicans and Democrats have argued that a new round of sanctions
targeting the oil and banking industries of Iran could serve as a
bargaining chip in the talks.
The P5+1 has considered offering relief to Tehran on some
sanctions in exchange for nuclear concessions.
Negotiations are expected to resume later this month in Geneva.
The Obama administration has offered Iran some of its frozen
overseas assets if the country agrees to a deal.
But it has insisted that the strictest restrictions should remain
in place until Iran conclusively proves it is not trying to assemble
nuclear weapons. Iran says it is just a civilian energy programme.
Some US legislators believe the White House is moving too
quickly.
In a separate hearing, several House legislators said the US
should take a harder line with Iran.
"The Iranian regime hasn't paused its nuclear programme," said
Representative Ed Royce, a Republican.
"Why should we pause our sanctions efforts as the administration
is pressuring Congress to do?"
The BBC's Capitol Hill producer Suzanne Kianpour says that,
according to senior administration officials, Mr Kerry - as well as
Vice-President Joe Biden - will continue to shuttle back and forth
to Congress to lobby lawmakers against proposing new sanctions.
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