Iran, US resume talks in Oman to hammer out deal on nuclear programme | Conflict News

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Negotiations are expected to focus on uranium enrichment begin in Oman as Trump express caution optimism.

Iran and the United States have opened a third round of conversations in Oman destined to stop Tehran’s nuclear activities, and discussions are expected to focus on uranium enrichment.

Iranian state television confirmed that the negotiations were underway in Muscat on Saturday, he thought that Neinder Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi, nor the American envoy Steve Witkoff reveals any detail about the conversations they will lead.

The conversations seek to limit Iran’s nuclear program in exchange for the elevation of some of the overwhelming economic sanctions that the United States has seen in the Islamic Republic for decades.

Iran, meanwhile, has pointed out that he is anxious to obtain relief from sanctions as his economy continues to suffer.

The president of the United States, Donald Trump, trusted to ensure a new agreement that would block Iran’s path to a nuclear bomb.

Speaking aboard Air Force One and on the way to Rome for the funeral of Pope Francis, Trump expressed his cautious optimism.

“Iran’s situation is going very well,” he said. “We had many conversations with them and I think we are going to have a deal. I would see myself a treatment than the other alternative. That would be good for humanity.”

But Trump repeated threats that emphasized that military options remained on the table if diplomacy failed, saying: “There are some people who want to make a different child, a much more unpleasant treatment, and I don’t.

Meanwhile, the spokesman for the Iranian Ministry of Foreign Affairs told State TV that the country’s defense and missile programs did not discuss negotiations in Omanan.

“The question of defense capacities and the country’s missiles is not [on the agenda] And he has not raised his leg in indirect conversations with the United States, “Esmaeil Baghaei said Saturday.

The conversations occur a week after a second round of negotiations in Rome, both parties described as constructive.

The tensions have remained high since Trump retired from the 2015 nuclear agreement in 2018, which caused a series of climbs. Since then, Iran has abandoned all the limits in its nuclear program, and enriches Uranium to 60 percent of purity purity levels or 90 percent.

Western countries, including the United States, have long accused Iran or that seek to acquire nuclear weapons, an accusation that Tehran has constantly denied, insisting that their program is for peaceful civil purposes.

The Secretary of State of the United States, Marco Rubio, said this week that Iran would have to stop completely enriching uranium under an agreement and importing any enriched uranium that he needed to feed his only atomic energy plant that works, Bushehr.

But Tehran says that ending its enrichment or delivery program is an enriched uranium storage are among the “red lines of Iran that could not commit” in conversations.

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