logo
Trump envoy Steve Witkoff says US-Iran talks are 'promising'

Trump envoy Steve Witkoff says US-Iran talks are 'promising'

Reuters5 hours ago

WASHINGTON, June 24 (Reuters) - U.S. President Donald Trump's Middle East Envoy Steve Witkoff said on Tuesday that talks between the United States and Iran were "promising" and that Washington was hopeful for a long-term peace deal.
"We are already talking to each other, not just directly but also through interlocutors. I think that the conversations are promising. We are hopeful that we can have a long-term peace agreement that resurrects Iran," Witkoff said in an interview on Fox News' "The Ingraham Angle" show.
"Now its for us to sit down with the Iranians and get to a comprehensive peace agreement, and I am very confident that we are going to achieve that," he added.
Since April, Iran and the U.S. have held indirect talks aimed at finding a new diplomatic solution regarding Iran's nuclear program. Tehran says its program is peaceful and Washington says it wants to ensure Iran cannot build a nuclear weapon.
Trump announced a ceasefire on Monday between U.S. ally Israel and its regional rival Iran which was aimed at ending their air war that began on June 13 when Israel struck Iran. The conflict had raised alarms in a region that was already on edge since the start of Israel's war in Gaza in October 2023.
Israel is the only country in the Middle East widely believed to have nuclear weapons and says its war against Iran aimed to prevent Tehran from developing its own nuclear weapons. Iran is a party to the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty while Israel is not.
The U.S. struck Iran's nuclear sites over the weekend and Iran targeted a U.S. base in Qatar on Monday in retaliation, before Trump announced an Israel-Iran ceasefire on social media.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

If Vladimir Putin won't help, Ayatollah Khamenei looks sunk
If Vladimir Putin won't help, Ayatollah Khamenei looks sunk

Times

time32 minutes ago

  • Times

If Vladimir Putin won't help, Ayatollah Khamenei looks sunk

Iran under siege sent its top diplomat this week to see Vladimir Putin in the Kremlin, supposedly the Tehran regime's one true remaining friend. The meeting was a flop and it was clear to all that the supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei was finished. The shrewd emissary, foreign minister Abbas Araghchi, had worked well with the Russians in an earlier stint as Iran's chief nuclear negotiator. More importantly perhaps, he served in Estonia and Finland as ambassador at the time of the collapse of the Soviet Union. So everyone around the Kremlin table this week understood the moment, the blink of an eyelid that signifies the sudden approach of a fin de régime. The Russians may have anticipated an Iranian plea to intervene with Donald Trump and persuade the American president not to push for a chaotic handover of power. Or was Iran seeking a safe refuge, if not for the supreme leader then at least for his son Mojtaba? Moscow is already full of Assad clan members, decamped from Damascus to ensure they did not endure the grisly end that befell Libya's Muammar Gaddafi. In fact, the ambassador merely wanted to clarify the terms of a 20-year strategic partnership signed last January, hinting at mutual support in case of outside attack. Were Russia and Iran still allies? Was the Crink axis — which also includes China and North Korea — still a thing? We don't know yet if Araghchi got an answer. A cynic would say that neither Russia nor China is going to cross the Trump administration for a dying regime. And that same cynic will have noted that the Putin photographed with Araghchi in the Kremlin looked much younger than his 72 years, resembling one of his team of younger doubles. Who knows? The real president might have had another pressing engagement. Fresh from seeing his number one Middle East ally fall apart in Syria in a fortnight, Putin has spent the past 12 days watching Iran shift from a clerical autocracy into a form of martial law. Khamenei, hiding in a bombproof (but far from secret) shelter, has delegated authority to a new council, a shura that is dominated by officers from the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC). But the supreme leader's communications have been reduced to a minimum, and not with IRGC commanders, nor with anyone able to inform him about bomb damage or the reeling economy. Outside the shelter, his world has been collapsing. At least a dozen top generals and nuclear scientists have been assassinated. Commanders are killed and so, within days, are their replacements. Iran has no control over its airspace, the main nuclear installations have been hammered, oil and energy facilities are in flames. The IRGC headquarters in charge of the defence of Tehran has been hit, as has the homeland defence and internal threat department, the information security command, the HQ of the Basij militia, and the nerve-hub of the intelligence and security police. The gates of the notorious Evin high-security prison have been blown open. Trump, having denied that he was seeking regime change, has started to publicly frame the question of why a system that has so profoundly failed to shield its citizens can still claim legitimacy. You can see why he might have changed his pitch: the opening of Evin is an image comparable to the storming of the Bastille. It helps to establish Trump's credentials as a revolutionary leader. But the administration has to have the residual wisdom to reject the choice of killing — martyring, as he would see it — the supreme leader in his monastic hideaway. There is more at stake in Iran than uprooting a nasty regime. It is about dealing with an even more dangerous vacuum. The collapse of the Soviet empire seemed like a glorious day in the West; to Putin it marked the start of a long, sweaty nightmare of cascading national uprisings. The 12-day war of Iran has established that one leadership generation of clerico-politicians — that of 86-year-old Khamenei and the veterans of the long 1980s war against Iraq — has lost its natural successors. Now the political battle may be dominated by a faction of the IRGC, hardline champions of national pride and victimhood, inward-looking, inclined to hunt down traitors and those deemed to be Israeli collaborators. This is a faction closely linked to the military industrial complex, the cash cow of the IRGC; it will try to influence the choice of the next supreme leader. Pragmatists who advocated cautious modernisation, strategic patience and double-dealing diplomatic manoeuvres to win the lifting of western sanctions are likely to lose out. Whatever comes next will be pumped up by anti-Israel and anti-American sentiment. The worst, most reckless outcome of this war would be that in the hidden depths of the Fordow plant, its uranium enrichment potential has survived. That a new Iranian regime suspends all access to international inspectors and that it makes common cause with a nuclear rogue state to start up an even more secretive road to the bomb (North Korea, I'm looking at you). It doesn't have to end quite so apocalyptically and there are ways perhaps that Iran can scramble out of its pariah status. But if Iran is going to enter the modern world then it has to start behaving like a responsible actor. Its false friends in the rogue Crink axis have encouraged the idea that getting hold of the means to blow up the world will somehow make Tehran stronger and more respected in the region. That's just bully-boy thinking and this week, under foreign bombardment, many young Iranians have woken up to the fact they have been led into a geopolitical cul-de-sac by their deluded political class.

The Latest: 7 Israeli soldiers killed in Gaza as Iran-Israel ceasefire holds
The Latest: 7 Israeli soldiers killed in Gaza as Iran-Israel ceasefire holds

The Independent

time34 minutes ago

  • The Independent

The Latest: 7 Israeli soldiers killed in Gaza as Iran-Israel ceasefire holds

Seven Israeli soldiers were killed Tuesday in the southern Gaza city of Khan Younis when their armored vehicle was struck by an explosive, an Israeli military official said Wednesday. The announcement comes a day after witnesses and hospitals in Gaza said Israeli forces and drones opened fire toward hundreds of Palestinians waiting for aid in separate incidents in southern and central Gaza early Tuesday, killing at least 44. Meanwhile, people in Iran began returning to their lives as a ceasefire with Israel, negotiated by President Donald Trump, appeared to be holding. State media described heavy traffic around the Caspian Sea area and other rural areas outside of the capital, Tehran, as people began returning to the city. The Iran-Israel conflict lasted 12 days with Israel targeting Iranian nuclear and military sites, saying it could not allow Tehran to develop atomic weapons. On Sunday, the U.S. intervened by dropping bunker-buster bombs on Iranian nuclear sites. Iran has long maintained that its nuclear program is peaceful. Here is the latest: 7 Israeli soldiers killed in Gaza Israel's military said Wednesday that seven soldiers had been killed the day before inside Gaza. A military official, speaking on the condition of anonymity in line with military regulations, said that the seven were killed around 5pm when an explosive struck their armored vehicle in the southern Gaza city of Khan Younis. The military said another soldier was badly wounded Tuesday from RPG fire. The incident was an unusually deadly one for Israel's troops operating inside Gaza. The military says over 860 soldiers have been killed since the war began with the Oct. 7, 2023 Hamas attack — including more than 400 during fighting inside Gaza. —— By Julia Frankel in Jerusalem Hamas claims attack on Israeli soldiers Al-Qassam Brigades, Hamas' military wing, said on its Telegram channel Tuesday it had ambushed Israeli soldiers taking cover inside a residential building in the southern Gaza Strip. Some of the soldiers were killed and other injured after they were targeted by a Yassin 105 missile and another missile south of Khan Younis, Hamas said. Al-Qassam fighters then targeted the building with machine guns. It was not immediately clear whether the incident was related to the Israeli military's announcement that seven of its soldiers were killed Tuesday in Gaza. Iran executes more prisoners Iran executed three more prisoners Wednesday over allegedly spying for Israel, its state-run IRNA news agency reported, the latest hangings connected to its war with Israel. Iran identified the three men executed Wednesday as Azad Shojaei, Edris Aali and Iraqi national Rasoul Ahmad Rasoul. Iran is one of the world's top executioners. After the brutal 1980s Iran-Iraq war, Iran carried out the mass execution of thousands of political prisoners and others, raising concerns among activists about a similar wave coming after the war with Israel. The hangings happened in Urmia Prison in Iran's West Azerbaijan province, which is the country's most northwestern province. IRNA cited Iran's judiciary for the news, saying the men had been accused of bringing 'assassination equipment' into the country. Wednesday's executions bring the total number of hangings for espionage around the war up to six. Israeli strikes killed more than 1,000 in Iran, group says Israeli strikes on Iran have killed at least 1,054 people and wounded 4,476 others, according to figures released Wednesday by the Washington-based group Human Rights Activists. The group, which has provided detailed casualty figures from multiple rounds of unrest in Iran, said of those killed, it identified 417 civilians and 318 security force personnel. Iran's government provided sporadic casualty information throughout the war. Its latest update on Tuesday put the death toll at 606 people killed, with 5,332 others being injured. In Israel, at least 28 people have been killed and more than 1,000 wounded in the war.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store