
Iran said that the first formal interviews with US President Donald Trump on his nuclear program were “constructive” and both sides said they would meet again in a week.
Both parties discussed the Iranian nuclear program and the abolition of sanctions “in the constructive atmosphere and with mutual respect”, said the Iranian Foreign Ministry in its statement after indirect interviews in Oman, which lasted more than two hours. Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi and American special envoy Steve Witkoff met briefly and spoke after the talks, according to the statement.
The discussions were “very positive and constructive”, while the related problems are “very complicated”, the White House said in its statement. Witkoff told Araghchi “that he has instructions from President Trump to solve the differences of our two nations through dialogue and diplomacy, if possible,” according to the US reading.
Saturday’s meeting was the first interviews at the highest level of the US and Iran since 2022, which meant a renewed effort to solve years of distance over the Iranian nuclear program. Trump has repeatedly said that he wants an agreement or resorts to a military event, while Tehran said he did not answer the threat and only agrees with indirect conversations.
Araghchi told Iranian State Television that the delegations were planning to re -end 19 April, confirming the White House statement. Interviews can take place in another place, and Oman still serves as a facilitator, said Araghchi.
“The first meeting was a constructive session that took place in a quiet and very respectful environment; no inappropriate language was used,” Araghchi said. He added that both parties have shown the obligation to exercise a “desirable agreement from the position of equality”.
“No party wants infertile, lengthy or time dealing with negotiations,” the minister said. “The American site also said that their preference is to achieve an agreement in the shortest possible time, but it will not be easy.”
Oman’s Foreign Minister Badr Al Bubaidi, who mediated interviews between delegations in separate rooms, said that the discussion took place in “friendly atmosphere that contributes to bridging aspects and eventually reaches regional and global peace, security and stability.”
Oil traders monitor negotiations, although for the time being, they focus on the impact of Trump’s customs policy and its threat to the global demand that has sent raw prizes to a four -year minimum this week.
Iranian production remains robust with almost six years of almost 3.4 million barrels a day, although there are signs of backup exports as traders who undergo harder sanctions.
Trump left the original nuclear agreement from 2015 with Iran in his first term of office and was the driving force of strict sanctions that seriously hung by the Iranian economy.
In recent years, Iranian administrative establishment has been involved in the growing level of unrest and disagreement and is widely unpopular with most of the city’s middle class, which has suffered from uncontrollable inflation and changing dancing for more than ten years.
With the help of Golnar Motevali and Rachel avalanches.
This article was generated from an automated news agency without text modifications.
(Tagstotranslate) Iran