New York Times: The main difference between Tehran and Washington over enrichment in Iran
The US magazine said in a report that the fundamental disagreement between Tehran and Washington in their indirect nuclear talks is the US demand to completely stop uranium enrichment on Iranian soil.
According to RCO News Agency, indirect talks between Iran and the United States on the Tehran nuclear program continue with Oman’s mediation, the fifth round of the Italian capital on Friday.
Iranian Foreign Minister Seyed Abbas Arakchi and US President Steve Witakaf are in charge of Iranian and American negotiating delegations.
The New York Times reported on Wednesday, reporting on the process of talks: The main difference in negotiations between Witcaf and Iraqchi is focused on US President Donald Trump’s position that Tehran should stop all nuclear enrichment on its territory.
Iraqchi has repeatedly rejected this restriction, and on Tuesday, in a post on social media, he repeated that “if Western powers insist on zero enrichment in Iran, there will be nothing left to discuss the nuclear issue.”
According to the report, Witcaf and Oman, who act as a mediator, are investigating creative options to prevent the collapse of the negotiations. Among these options is a possible joint regional investment for fuel production for nuclear reactors with Iran, Saudi Arabia and other Arab powers, as well as US participation. But the real place of enrichment is unclear.
Iran had earlier stated that the proposal would not replace enrichment in Iran.
Participants in the negotiations say that Witcaf has also abandoned his initial opposition to the signing of a temporary agreement that determines the principles of the final agreement, but this may not satisfy Israel or anti -Iranian extremists.
This is what the Barack Obama government did in year 2, though it lasted five years for them to reach a final agreement; The agreement that Trump fought against that election campaign during the presidential nomination of the year and called it “disaster”, as it allows Iran to continue enriching at low levels, and this restriction expires completely in year 6.
Trump was finally unilaterally withdrawn from the deal in the first year of his presidency and re -imposed economic sanctions against Iran.
The American newspaper went on to report on the Zionist regime’s opposition to any conversation between Tehran and Washington, and wrote: Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu continues to insist on military action against Iran that thwarts Trump’s efforts to reach a negotiated agreement.
Netanyahu has always been pessimistic about any diplomatic effort to communicate with Tehran over the decades. He disagreed with the Year 2 agreement and sought to remove it, even at a joint congressional meeting and supported it.
It now seems that he is working hard to get out of the new talks between Iran and the US. This time, Zionist authorities have tried an old solution: threatening to attack Iran, even without US help. They insist that they do not bluff, though they have raised and retreated such threats several times over the nearly two decades.
But US military officials are skeptical of the effectiveness of the Zionist attack without US support.
The New York Times also wrote: The Israelis are specifically suspicious of any interim agreement that may hold Iranian facilities for months or years in their place until the final agreement is reached. And at first, the Trump administration was skeptical. Witcaf, a senior US negotiator, told his Iranian counterpart that President Trump wants a final agreement within two months or more.
But the deadline is over and there is still a big difference of whether Iran is allowed to continue uranium enrichment. Tehran, as the signatories of the Nuclear Weapons Control Treaty (NPT), sees uranium enrichment as its right because it does not ban the enrichment treaty.
According to the report, now, the Trump administration seems to be more open to some kind of interim declaration in common, as it could help prevent Israeli attack.
Experts say that in order to satisfy Zionists and anti -Iranian extremists in Congress, any interim agreement must almost oblige Iran to remove or dilute it to a much lower level. This allows Trump to say that it has restricted Iran’s nuclear program and has eliminated its alleged threat.
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