DUBAI, United Arab Emirates
Nuclear talks between Iran and the United States “will lead nowhere” if Washington insists that Tehran drop its uranium enrichment activity to zero, Deputy Foreign Minister Majid Takhtravanchi was quoted by state media on Monday as saying.
US special envoy Steve Witkoff
reiterated Washington’s stance on Sunday that any new deal between the US and
Iran must include an agreement to refrain from enrichment, a possible pathway
to developing nuclear bombs. Tehran says its nuclear energy program has
entirely peaceful purposes.
“Our position on enrichment is
clear and we have repeatedly stated that it is a national achievement from
which we will not back down,” Takhtravanchi said.
During his visit to the Gulf
region last week, US President Donald Trump said a deal was very close but that
Iran needed to move quickly to resolve the decades-long dispute.
Washington is complicating
negotiations by expressing views in public different from what is discussed
privately during talks, an Iranian foreign ministry spokesperson said on
Monday.
“Despite hearing contradictory
statements from the Americans, we are still participating in negotiations,”
Esmail Baghaei added.
A fifth round of talks is
expected to take place in Rome this weekend pending confirmation, an Iranian
official told Reuters.
During his first, 2017-21 term
as president, Trump withdrew the United States from a 2015 deal between Iran
and world powers that placed strict limits on Tehran’s enrichment activities in
exchange for relief from international sanctions.
Trump, who branded the 2015
accord one-sided in Iran’s favor, also reimposed sweeping US sanctions on Iran.
The Islamic Republic responded by escalating enrichment.
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