Tag: Abbas Araghchi

  • Iran foreign minister says seeks ‘fair’ deal with US in nuclear talks

    Iran foreign minister says seeks ‘fair’ deal with US in nuclear talks

    Iran’s top diplomat arrived in Oman on Saturday and began laying the groundwork for high-stakes nuclear talks with the United States that are unfolding under the threat of military action.

    Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi flew in ahead of the foes’ highest-level discussions since an international agreement on Iran’s nuclear programme crumbled after US President Donald Trump pulled out during his first term in office.

    “Our intention is to reach a fair and honourable agreement from an equal position,” Araghchi said in a video posted by Iranian state TV.

    Iran, weakened by Israel’s pummelling of its allies Hezbollah in Lebanon and Hamas in Gaza, is seeking relief from wide-ranging sanctions hobbling its economy.

    Tehran has agreed to the meetings despite baulking at Trump’s “maximum pressure” campaign of ramping up sanctions and repeated military threats.

    Meanwhile the US, hand-in-glove with Iran’s arch-enemy Israel, wants to stop Tehran from ever getting close to developing a nuclear bomb.

    The two sides are already at odds over the format of the talks, with the US calling them “direct” while the Iranians insist on using an intermediary.

    After arriving in Muscat, Araghchi set out Iran’s position on the “indirect” talks with Oman’s Foreign Minister Badr bin Hamad Al Busaidi, an Iranian statement said.

    “Araghchi provided the Omani foreign minister with Iran’s basis and positions on the talks for transmission to the other side,” Iran’s foreign ministry said.

    Trump’s special envoy Steve Witkoff is expected to lead the US team in Oman, which has long played a mediating role between Iran and Western countries.

    – Witkoff open to ‘compromise’ –
    Witkoff told The Wall Street Journal that “our position today” starts with demanding that Iran completely dismantle its nuclear programme — a view held by hardliners around Trump that few expect Iran would ever accept.

    “That doesn’t mean, by the way, that at the margin we’re not going to find other ways to find compromise between the two countries,” Witkoff told the newspaper.

    “Where our red line will be, there can’t be weaponisation of your nuclear capability,” he added.

    The talks were revealed in a surprise announcement by Trump as he met the press alongside Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu at the White House on Monday.

    Hours before they begin, Trump told reporters aboard Air Force One: “I want Iran to be a wonderful, great, happy country. But they can’t have a nuclear weapon.”

    Iranian supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei’s adviser Ali Shamkhani said Tehran was “seeking a real and fair agreement”, adding that “important and implementable proposals are ready”.

    Saturday’s contact between the two sides, which have not had diplomatic relations for decades, follows repeated threats of military action by both the United States and Israel.

    “If it requires military, we’re going to have military,” Trump said on Wednesday when asked what would happen if the talks fail to produce a deal.

    Responding to Trump’s threat, Tehran said it could expel United Nations nuclear inspectors, a move that Washington warned would be an “escalation”.

    – ‘Survival of the regime’ –
    The 2015 deal that Trump exited three years later aimed to make it practically impossible for Iran to build an atomic bomb, while at the same time allowing it to pursue a civil nuclear programme.

    Britain, China, France, Russia and Germany were the other parties to the agreement, of which Araghchi was a key architect.

    Iran, which insists its nuclear programme is only for civilian purposes, stepped up its activities after Trump abandoned the 2015 agreement.

    The latest International Atomic Energy Agency report noted with “serious concern” that Iran had an estimated 274.8 kilograms of uranium enriched to 60 percent, nearing the weapons grade of 90 percent.

    Karim Bitar, a Middle East Studies lecturer at Sciences Po university in Paris, said negotiations “will not focus exclusively on… the nuclear programme”.

    “The deal would have to include Iran stopping its support to its regional allies,” a long-standing demand by US allies in the Gulf, he said.

    For Iran, it could be a matter of the government’s very survival.

    “The one and only priority is the survival of the regime, and ideally, to get some oxygen, some sanctions relief, to get their economy going again, because the regime has become quite unpopular,” Bitar said.

  • Iran top diplomat rejects direct negotiations with US

    Iran top diplomat rejects direct negotiations with US

    Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi on Sunday rejected direct negotiations with the United States as “meaningless”, after US President Donald Trump said he would prefer direct talks with the Islamic republic.

    Trump had called last month on Tehran to hold negotiations on its nuclear programme with Washington, but threatened to bomb Iran if diplomacy fails.

    On Thursday, the US president said he would prefer to hold “direct talks” with Iran.

    “I think it goes faster and you understand the other side a lot better than if you go through intermediaries,” he argued.

    But on Sunday, Araghchi said “direct negotiations would be meaningless with a party that constantly threatens to resort to force in violation of the UN Charter and that expresses contradictory positions from its various officials”.

    “We remain committed to diplomacy and are ready to try the path of indirect negotiations,” he added, according to a foreign ministry statement.

    “Iran keeps itself prepared for all possible or probable events, and just as it is serious in diplomacy and negotiations, it will also be decisive and serious in defending its national interests and sovereignty,” Araghchi said.

    On Saturday, Iranian President Masoud Pezeshkian said his country was willing to engage in dialogue with the US “on equal footing”.

    He also questioned Washington’s sincerity in calling for negotiations, saying “if you want negotiations, then what is the point of threatening?”

    – Nuclear programme –
    Western countries, led by the United States, have for decades accused Tehran of seeking to acquire nuclear weapons.

    Iran rejects the allegation and maintains that its nuclear activities exist solely for civilian purposes.

    On Saturday Hossein Salami, the head of the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps, said the country was “ready” for war.

    “We are not worried about war at all. We will not be the initiators of war, but we are ready for any war,” the official IRNA news agency reported him as saying.

    In 2015, Iran reached a landmark deal with the permanent members of the UN Security Council, namely the United States, France, China, Russia, and the United Kingdom, as well as Germany, to regulate its nuclear activities.

    The 2015 agreement formally known as the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action (JCPOA)gave Iran sanctions relief in exchange for curbs on its nuclear programme to guarantee that Tehran could not develop a nuclear weapon.

    In 2018, during Trump’s first term in office, the United States withdrew from the agreement and reinstated biting sanctions on Iran.

    A year later, Iran began rolling back on its commitments under the agreement and accelerated its nuclear programme.

    On Monday, Ali Larijani, a close adviser to supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, warned that while Iran was not seeking nuclear weapons, it would “have no choice but to do so” in the event of an attack against it.