Bruno Pellaud, former deputy director of the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA), tells swissinfo.ch that there is a lack of unity among the negotiating partners. He also predicts that Iran may face tougher sanctions.
The talks follow the discovery of a second uranium enrichment site in Iran.
Pellaud was a top IAEA official from 1993 to 1999, dealing extensively with North-Korean and Iranian issues. From 2001 to 2009, he was president of the Swiss Nuclear Forum.
He has maintained a key interest in nuclear energy and non-proliferation and presently writes on nuclear issues for the influential American website Huffington Post.
Bruno Pellaud: It is very difficult to say whether Iran is in a weak or strong position. There is wide consensus among all Iranian factions over the nuclear issue.
In any case, the Iranians will maintain their tough line and will reject efforts to stop the enrichment of uranium in Iran, as they have repeatedly stated.
B.P.: Whether it\'s the missile tests or Ahmadinejad\'s provocative speeches, the Iranians are upping the ante to show they are in charge back home and can represent a military threat to their neighbours.
But the discovery of a second uranium enrichment site is not the result of a spontaneous Iranian public declaration. Apparently the Russians warned Tehran that western secret services were ready to reveal the existence of this site. Iran therefore took the initiative by announcing its existence to show they respect legal mechanisms.
B.P.: To want to prevent Iran from possessing a nuclear weapon is a very serious objective. But the way in which the negotiations are taking place is very unwise.
You have five countries with nuclear weapons, and Germany, which doesn\'t. What\'s more, two of the participants – China and Russia – have no intention of applying serious sanctions against Iran.
My feeling is that Russia is participating in these negotiations to prevent an agreement between Iran and the West given the stakes surrounding Iranian gas, which would allow Europe to become less dependent on Russian gas.
And the EU is profoundly divided over Iran, with countries like Italy, which has very close trade ties with Iran and doesn\'t want sanctions, and nations like France, which back tougher sanctions.
This kind of uncoordinated front will not impress the Iranians.
B.P.: The American president has recently adopted a very tough line, alongside the French president and the British prime minister. This is designed to show that Iran will have its back to the wall in Geneva.
But Barack Obama promised talks without any preconditions, which the Iranians interpreted as not asking for the immediate halt to their uranium enrichment programme.
The main issue at this meeting is whether it will be followed by another one. If such a get-together is planned on Thursday, it will be a success.
B.P.: Probably both, although nuclear proliferation is in the spotlight right now.
Iran has acquired the necessary technologies for a military nuclear programme. It will soon secure the virtual ability to build a nuclear weapon. It\'s therefore all about stopping it.
It remains to be seen how this is done. The hardliners want to break Iran\'s back so that it cannot reach this objective. The others believe that to stop Iran from becoming a nuclear power you have to negotiate, while accepting certain compromises and controlling most of its nuclear facilities to prevent their military use.
This second option would enable Iran to save face allowing it to develop limited non-military nuclear capacities.
In the short term the nuclear question is the main issue. Barack Obama has already said he would accept Iran becoming a major regional power if it gave up the idea of possessing a nuclear weapon.
B.P.: This is the Sword of Damocles dangling over their heads. Certain US Republicans, as well as Israel, are convinced that a simple, radical solution would be to bomb Iran\'s nuclear facilities.
This would be absurd as the Iranians have openly spread their facilities across the country. In fact, it is be impossible to destroy Iran\'s nuclear potential. US Defence Secretary Robert Gates recently declared that a bombing campaign would only delay Iran\'s programme by a few years.
What\'s more, a military attack would push Iran towards a military nuclear programme.
Unless there is an opening up of the situation and a more rational basis for negotiations, we are heading for tougher sanctions. But on this point, the negotiating nations are not at all united.