Iranian president says talks with US ‘a step forward,’ dialogue key to ‘peaceful solution’
Talks between Iran and the United States, held with the support of regional countries, marked “a step forward,” Iranian President Masoud Pezeshkian said on Sunday.
“Dialogue has always been our strategy for achieving peaceful solutions,” Pezeshkian wrote on the US social media company X, stressing that Iran’s approach to the nuclear issue is based on “the rights guaranteed under the Non-Proliferation Treaty.”
The Iranian president added that the nation “responds to respect with respect but does not accept the language of force.”
Iran and the US resumed indirect nuclear diplomacy on Friday after weeks of heightened tensions, fueled by US President Donald Trump’s threat of military action against the country.
Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi described the talks as a “good start,” saying they could continue if the atmosphere of distrust is overcome. He said it was agreed that the process would continue and that the sides could reconvene in Muscat, Oman, at a later date.
According to Araghchi, Iran’s missile program is not subject to negotiations, now or in the future, describing it as a “defensive matter.”
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