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Iran's Supreme Leader Refutes Trump's Request for Nuclear Talks
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Iran's Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei has rejected a US push for talks between the two countries. He made this statement in an apparent response to a letter sent by the White House earlier in the week, which President Donald Trump said was meant to initiate a new round of nuclear talks. However, Khamenei claims that the US is not seeking negotiations, but rather imposing demands on Iran. He characterized the US as a "bullying government" that seeks to dominate others, rather than resolve issues through dialogue.
Our talks with Europeans have been ongoing and will continue … however, any decision by the UN Security Council or board of governors of the UN nuclear watchdog to pressure us will put under question the legitimacy of these talks.
You say that Iran has not fulfilled its commitments under the JCPOA. OK, have you fulfilled your commitments under the JCPOA?
If we wanted to build nuclear weapons, the US would not be able to stop it. We ourselves do not want it.
We negotiated for years, reached a complete and signed agreement, and then this individual tore it up.
The Islamic Republic of Iran will definitely not accept their demands.
It is not negotiation. It is commanding and imposition.
For them, negotiation is a means to introduce new demands. The issue is not just about nuclear matters, they raise new expectations that Iran will certainly not accept.
I'm not sure that everybody agrees with me, but we can make a deal that would be just as good as if you won militarily. But the time is happening now, the time is coming up. Something is going to happen one way or the other.
They will be about defense capabilities, about international capabilities of the country. [They will urge Iran] not to do [certain] things, not to meet some certain people, not to go to a certain place, not to produce some items, your missile range should not be more than a certain distance. Is it possible for anybody to accept these?
We have a situation with Iran that, something's going to happen very soon. Very, very soon.
There are two ways Iran can be handled, militarily or you make a deal.
I would prefer to make a deal, because I'm not looking to hurt Iran. They're great people.
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sources
- 1.CNN
- 2.The New York Times
- 3.South China Morning Post
- 4.The Times of India
- 5.The Guardian
- 6.Al Jazeera
- 7.Haaretz
- 8.CGTN
- 9.Le Monde
- 10.El Paìs
- 11.Agence France-Presse
- 12.El Pais
perspectives
- 1.US Foreign Policy
- 2.Chinese Foreign Policy
- 3.Israel Foreign Policy
- 4.Qatar Foreign Policy
- 5.Intercontinental Ballistic Missile
- 6.Nuclear Weapons
- 7.Iran Foreign Policy
- 8.Israel-Lebanese Hezbollah Conflict
- 9.Saudi Foreign Policy
- 10.Iranian politics
- 11.Israel-Iran Conflict
countries
- 1.United Arab Emirates
- 2.China
- 3.Germany
- 4.France
- 5.United Kingdom
- 6.Greece
- 7.Israel
- 8.Iraq
- 9.Iran, Islamic Republic of
- 10.Japan
- 11.Korea, Republic of
- 12.Lebanon
organizations
- 1.White House
- 2.Hamas
- 3.Republican Party
- 4.UN Security Council
- 5.Democratic Party
- 6.Hezbollah
- 7.International Atomic Energy Agency
- 8.Kremlin
- 9.White House National Security Council
persons
- 1.Ayatollah Ali Khamenei
- 2.Donald Trump
- 3.Abbas Araqchi
- 4.Eve Sampson
- 5.Barack Obama
- 6.Joe Biden
- 7.Kazem Jalali
- 8.Masoud Pezeshkian
- 9.Sergei Lavrov
- 10.Anwar Gargash
- 11.Brian Hughes
- 12.Dmitry Peskov