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Barring complications, Kerry injury unlikely to impact Iran talks

WASHINGTON - U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry's ability to negotiate a nuclear deal with Iran is unlikely to be affected by the broken leg he has suffered, but one medical expert said possible surgical complications might affect his ability to fly.

WASHINGTON - U.S. Secretary of State  John Kerry 's ability to negotiate a nuclear deal with Iran is unlikely to be affected by the broken leg he has suffered, but one medical expert said possible surgical complications might affect his ability to fly.

Kerry, 71, broke his leg while cycling in  France  on Sunday, after an intense round of negotiations with his Iranian counterpart  Mohammad Javad Zarif  the previous day, and is being flown home to  Boston  on a U.S. military aircraft.

Saturday's six hours of talks in Geneva were expected to be Kerry and Zarif's last face-to-face meeting until at least mid-June, U.S. officials said, ahead of an end-June deadline to agree a deal to curb Iran's nuclear program in exchange for sanctions relief.

Asked if Kerry expected to be back in the negotiating room by the end of the month, State Department spokeswoman  Marie Harf  replied: "Yes, absolutely."

Kerry, for whom an Iran deal would be a legacy-defining achievement, has taken a lead role in the complex seven-nation talks, logging multiple trips to  Europe  and often holding marathon one-on-one talks with Zarif.

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Expert-level talks are continuing and the lead U.S. negotiator,  Wendy Sherman , is expected to rejoin them this week. Despite his condition, Kerry made telephone calls on Sunday and Monday to Obama and the foreign ministers of Iran,  France  and  Spain .

If the  White House  wanted to pull in another senior official, which current and former officials said was highly unlikely, it has two obvious understudies at hand: Kerry's former deputy,  Bill Burns , and his current deputy,  Antony Blinken .

One medical specialist, who is not involved in Kerry's treatment, said the former presidential nominee faced surgery  and a minimum healing time of six to eight weeks with his weight off the leg, though he could be up and about on crutches a day after  surgery .

Dr.  David Helfet , chief of orthopedic trauma service at the  Hospital for Special Surgery in New York , said Kerry appeared to have a "peri-prosthetic" fracture, meaning a break in the same limb as an artificial replacement hip.

If the hip is loose, it would have to be fixed and the recovery might take longer, said Helfet.

The physician said  blood clots  are a concern after such an operation and that most doctors would not advise flying long distance for three to six weeks afterwards.

The final round of talks is expected to take place in  Vienna .

"He's going to be hurting for the next week or 10 days. It will take a while to bounce back, so he's going to be on  pain  medications, narcotics," Helfet said.

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Kerry was upbeat as he flew to  Boston  aboard a C-17 U.S. military transport, tweeting "Headed back to  Boston . Look fwd to getting leg set & getting back to @StateDept! Meantime, work goes on. Big thanks for well-wishes."

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