A senior administration official reported that US President Donald Trump reportedly wrote to Iran’s Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei to request that he “agree to a fresh nuclear deal very shortly.”
Trump is willing to take other measures to stop Iran from developing nuclear weapons, but, if Tehran doesn’t.
Ayatollah Khamenei was informed by President Trump that he wanted to resolve the nuclear programme dispute diplomatically and quickly. There would be other methods to solve this if this were not possible, according to US National Security Council national Brian Hughes, who spoke to The New York Post.
Deadline of two months
According to Forbes, Trump has given the 85-year-old high chief a two-month date to reach an agreement on Iran’s nuclear program. In an earlier interview with Fox News, the leader made hints about the move, revealing that he had reached out to Khamenei to suggest strong conversations.
We didn’t permit them to possess nuclear weapons. Everything is going to occur very quickly. Trump had stated that he would prefer to have a peace deal over the other choice because the other option would solve the issue.
The email was transferred to Iran after being passed through political programs, according to Axios, and was first handed to UAE President Mohammed Bin Zayed by US special envoy to the Middle East Steve Witkoff. However, it is still unclear when precisely the two-month date ended.
Iran’s answer
Khamenei criticized Trump’s email as” a dishonesty” intended to show Iran as unwilling to negotiate. Iran’s delegation to the UN after suggested that discussions could take place under certain circumstances.
Such conversations may be taken into account if the goal of negotiations is to address issues about Iran’s nuclear program’s possible fortification, the statement read.
Such negotiations will always occur if the goal is to destroy Iran’s peaceful nuclear program in order to demonstrate that what Obama failed to accomplish has already been accomplished.
Iran’s nuclear program was temporarily imposed under the 2015 Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action (JCPOA ), which was facilitated under former US President Barack Obama. Trump, a vocal critic of the contract, withdrew the US from it in 2018, and reinstituted severe sanctions as part of a “maximum pressure” plan. Tehran responded by restarting an innovative spin facility in Natanz in 2020, as well as lifting the JCPOA’s ban on uranium enhancement beyond its permitted boundaries.
rising conflicts
US officials allege in court papers that Iran planned to attack Trump during the 2024 election year, prompting the nuclear conversations. Tehran has even sought retribution for the death of General Qasem Soleimani in a US attack ordered by Trump in 2020.
Trump has warned that any harm on him would cause a letter from his group telling him to “obliterate” the government if Iran venges on him.
Trump also issued new instructions to Iran over its alleged help for Houthi insurgents, who have been attacking business vessels in the Red Sea.
From this point forward, every picture fired by the Houthis will be treated as a shot fired from IRAN’s arms and management. Trump declared on Truth Social on Monday that Iran will been held accountable and suffer the consequences, and those consequences may be dire.
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