A senior Iranian negotiator voiced satisfaction in the promising trend of the talks between Iran and the Group5+1 (the five Permanent UN Security Council members plus Germany), and expressed the hope that the seven delegations could strike a final deal in the next three months. Speaking before a new round of expert-level talks between Tehran and the G5+1, which started work in New York on Tuesday, Iranian Deputy Foreign Minister for legal and international affairs Seyed Abbas Araqchi told the British Guardian that Tehran remained hopeful that a comprehensive agreement could be reached by the 20 July deadline. But Araqchi, part of Iran's three-man lead negotiating team, warned that many pitfalls remained, including a chronic lack of trust between the US and Iran, a host of inter-related technical issues, and outside attempts to derail the process. Araqchi said the talks were going in the right direction. "Whether it gets to a conclusion is something else. Obviously we are hopeful. For our part, we are very serious and we have goodwill. If the other side reciprocates, hopefully we will come to an end. But anything can happen." He said the next top-level round of talks, due to begin in Vienna on 13 May, would be the most difficult part so far, because the parties had agreed to start writing a draft of a final agreement. Iran and the Group 5+1 started experts talks in New York on Tuesday. The expert teams will wrap up their talks later today. The experts' talks precede the fourth round of negotiations between the senior diplomats of Iran and the G5+1, which will kick off in Vienna on May 14. Deputy chief negotiators from Iran and the sextet wrapped up their last round of talks in Vienna on April 9. The talks were headed by Araqchi and EU foreign policy deputy Chief Helga Schmidt. The talks started on April 8 by a session presided by EU foreign policy chief Catherine Ashton and Iranian Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif at the UN headquarters in Vienna, and continued by a meeting among the deputy chief negotiators of the seven nations. The Iranian Foreign Ministry in a statement on April 8 reiterated that its team of negotiators would not discuss any topic but the country's nuclear standoff with the West in its talks with the six world powers. The talks between Tehran and the G5+1 are part of efforts to seal a final deal on Iran’s nuclear energy program. Iran and the Group 5+1 representatives had several sessions of talks in Vienna on March 18-19 too. Following the breakthrough interim agreement between Iran and the six powers, the two sides accepted to send their senior negotiating teams to monthly meetings to discuss a final and comprehensive deal until July. If the seven nations fail to agree on a final deal by then, the Geneva interim agreement will be extended for another 6 months. On November 24, Iran and the Group 5+1 sealed a six-month Joint Plan of Action to lay the groundwork for the full resolution of the West’s decade-old dispute with Iran over the latter's nuclear energy program. In exchange for Tehran’s confidence-building bid to limit certain aspects of its nuclear activities, the sextet of the world powers agreed to lift some of the existing sanctions against Tehran and impose no nuclear-related sanctions on Iran during the six-month period.