Politics

Iran, US begin indirect talks on nuclear program


Envoys from Iran and the U.S. traveled to Oman Saturday to begin “indirect” talks regarding Tehran’s developing nuclear program.

“Indirect talks between Iran and the United States with the mediation of the Omani foreign minister have started,” Iranian Foreign Ministry spokesperson Esmail Baghaei confirmed Saturday morning in a post on social platform X. 

Baghaei said the talks between Middle East envoy Steve Wiktoff and Iranian Foreign Minister Seyed Abbas Araghchi will be mediated by Oman’s Foreign Minister Badr Al-Busaidy. The two delegations are seated in separate rooms, and they will relay their messages through Al-Busaidy, according to the spokesperson.

The talks between the two countries come as President Trump has repeatedly pushed to reach a new nuclear deal with Iran. Trump in 2018 notably pulled out of a previous agreement that was brokered by former President Obama.

The White House, however, has emphasized that a fresh deal must include Tehran disposing of its nuclear arsenal.

If an agreement is not reached, the president said, military action against the country might ensue. The warning comes after the U.S. imposed new sanctions on five entities and one individual based in Iran earlier this week for their support of those overseeing the nuclear program.

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

Before discussions with the U.S. delegation, Araghchi and Al-Busaidy met in Muscat, Oman. Iran's top diplomat expressed gratitude to Oman for hosting the talks and shared the “key points and positions of the Islamic Republic of Iran with his Omani counterpart to be conveyed to the other side.” 

Ahead of the high-stakes talks, Witkoff said the administration’s “red line” with Iran is preventing the Islamic nation from churning out a nuclear weapon. 

Witkoff, who Trump has delegated the lead negotiator in ceasefire talks between Russia and Ukraine, said the administration's starting demand is for Tehran to nix its nuclear program. The same position is also held by Israel, but the envoy said there’s some room for compromise to strike a deal. 

“I think our position begins with dismantlement of your program. That is our position today,” Witkoff told The Wall Street Journal in an interview published Friday. “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.”

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

Witkoff added that if a deal with Tehran is forged, there needs to be a robust verification process to ensure that Iran is not working on producing a nuclear bomb. He told The Journal that the Saturday talks are about “trust building.”  

“It is about talking about why it is so important for us to get to a deal, not the exact terms of the deal,” he said.


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