Iran and the USA have concluded a primary spherical of talks in Oman over Tehran’s nuclear programme – the very best degree assembly between the 2 nations since 2018.
Iran’s International Minister Abbas Araghchi had instructed Iranian state tv forward of the talks that his nation wished a “honest settlement”.
President Donald Trump pulled the US out of a earlier nuclear settlement between Iran and world powers in 2018, and has lengthy mentioned he would make a “higher” deal.
The talks are seen as an essential first step in establishing whether or not a deal could be accomplished.
They lasted two and a half hours, and each side agreed to renew them subsequent week, Araghchi mentioned.
Esmail Baghaei, Iran’s international ministry spokesman, described the talks as “oblique”, with the delegations seated in separate rooms and exchanging messages by way of Oman’s international minister, Badr bin Hamad al-Busaidi.
Trump’s envoy Steve Witkoff, who’s main the US delegation, had beforehand solely spoken of assembly face-to-face.
Nevertheless, Araghchi wrote on social media following the talks that he and Witkoff “talked for a couple of minutes” with Busaidi when leaving the talks.
He mentioned that the following spherical might not occur in Oman, however would nonetheless be mediated by the nation.
“Neither we, nor the opposite occasion, need fruitless negotiations, discussions for discussions’ sake, time losing or talks that drag on perpetually,” Araghchi instructed Iranian state tv.
Busaidi wrote on X that he was “proud” to have mediated the negotiations “with the shared goal of concluding a good and binding settlement”.
He mentioned the talks “befell in a pleasant environment conducive to bridging viewpoints and in the end attaining regional and international peace, safety and stability”.
A very powerful challenge at stake is what sort of deal both sides can be keen to simply accept.
Trump despatched a letter to Iran’s supreme chief by way of the United Arab Emirates final month, saying he wished a deal to forestall Iran from buying nuclear weapons and to avert attainable navy strikes by the US and Israel.
Iran hopes a deal to restrict, however not dismantle, its nuclear programme in alternate for sanctions aid.
“Our intention is to achieve a good and honourable settlement from an equal place, and if the opposite facet additionally comes from the identical place, then hopefully there can be an opportunity for an preliminary understanding that can result in a path of negotiations,” Araghchi mentioned.
He added that the workforce that got here with him was made up of consultants “educated on this explicit subject and who’ve a historical past of negotiating on this challenge”.
An unnamed supply in Oman instructed the information company Reuters that the talks would additionally search to de-escalate regional tensions and safe prisoner exchanges.
Trump had disclosed that the talks would happen throughout a go to by Benjamin Netanyahu to the White Home on Monday. The Israeli prime minister mentioned on Tuesday that each leaders had agreed that Iran “won’t have nuclear weapons”.
Netanyahu has known as for a “Libya-style deal”, referring to the north African nation utterly dismantling its weapons programme in an settlement reached with Western powers in 2003. That could be utterly unacceptable to Iran.
Iranian officers have made it clear that the negotiations will solely concentrate on its nuclear programme, not its broader defence functionality, reminiscent of its ballistic missile programme.
On the eve of the talks on Friday, Trump mentioned that he wished Iran “to be a beautiful, nice, completely happy nation – however they cannot have nuclear weapons”.
Trump has warned that the US would use navy drive if a deal was not reached, and Iran has repeatedly mentioned it won’t negotiate below stress.
The US president instructed reporters within the Oval Workplace on Monday that it could “be a really unhealthy day for Iran” if the talks had been unsuccessful.
Iran insists its nuclear actions are fully peaceable and that it’s going to by no means search to develop or purchase nuclear weapons.
Nevertheless, since Trump pulled out of the 2015 settlement – which expires later this yr – Iran has more and more breached restrictions imposed by the present nuclear deal in retaliation for crippling US sanctions reinstated seven years in the past, and has stockpiled sufficient highly-enriched uranium to make a number of bombs.
Beneath the phrases of the 2015 deal, Iran agreed to solely enrich uranium as much as 3.67% purity for the following 15 years.
In February, the Worldwide Atomic Vitality Company (IAEA) nuclear watchdog reported that Tehran had stockpiled uranium enriched to 60% purity and will swiftly transfer to 90%, which might be weapons-grade.
The 2015 nuclear deal took almost two years of intensive negotiations. At first of this new effort to achieve an settlement, Iran’s programme is way extra developed and sophisticated, and the broader area is way extra risky.