
Iran rejects demand from US to rely on imported uranium
Iran has insisted it must be allowed to have its own uranium enrichment capacity for its civil nuclear programme, rejecting a US demand that Tehran must rely exclusively on imported nuclear fuel.
If Washington sticks to the position taken by Marco Rubio, the secretary of state, in the third round of talks in Oman on Saturday, the two sides will have hit their first major negotiating hurdle. They are trying to reach an agreement that blocks off Iran's access to a nuclear bomb in return for relief from economic sanctions.
The Rubio plan is an attempt at compromise between those inside the US administration who say the only certain way to close off Iran's path to a nuclear bomb is to dismantle its entire nuclear programme and those that say Iran should be allowed to enrich low purity uranium subject to a full external inspection. That proposal is similar to the system set up in the 2015 nuclear deal from which Donald Trump withdrew the US in his first term.
US national security adviser Mike Waltz had argued Tehran must agree to the 'full dismantlement' of its nuclear programme.
But Rubio this week told The Free Press podcast: 'If Iran wants a civil nuclear programme, they can have one just like many other countries in the world.' He added that Tehran would be required to 'import enriched material'.
Iran's chief negotiator, Abbas Araghchi, speaking in China, said: 'If America's only demand is that Iran not have nuclear weapons, this is an achievable demand, but if it has impractical and illogical demands, it is natural that we will run into problems.'
In the text of a speech he had been due to deliver virtually to the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace this week, Araghchi said: 'Iran had a right to be treated with equal respect and this includes our rights as a signatory the Nuclear Non Proliferation Treaty, including the ability to produce fuel for our nuclear power plants. Iran must not be treated as an exception within the global non-proliferation framework.
'We have made abundantly clear that we have nothing to hide which is why Iran under the 2015 nuclear deal agreed to the most intrusive inspection regime the world has ever seen.'
Araghchi spoke of Iran's long-term plan to build at least 19 more nuclear plants, vowing US firms could bid on the projects meaning 'tens of billions of dollars in potential contracts are up for grabs'. This was enough alone, he said, to revive the stagnant nuclear industry in the US.
The former CIA director William Burns, speaking this week at the University of Chicago, said: 'I don't personally think that this Iranian regime is going to agree to zero domestic enrichment. And again, in the comprehensive agreement, that was limited to under 5%, which is what you need for a civilian programme, not for a weapons programme. But that's going to be one of the big challenges'.
The US has appointed Michael Anton to head a technical team that will work alongside chief negotiator Steve Witkoff. Anton, a speech writer, chef and fashionista, is director of policy planning staff at the Department of State and not an expert on nuclear issues. However, he served on the national security staff in the first Donald Trump administration. He will head a team of 12 officials.
Andrea Stricker, research fellow at the Foundation for the Defense of Democracies, said it was 'a real risk that Trump could be pushed to negotiate something like an interim deal that would leave Iran's breakout capability intact with a short timeline to the bomb'.
She added: 'We have to remember that Iran only needs a few 100 advanced centrifuges at a secret site to be able to ratchet back up within a couple of months to the level of Iranian stockpiles that it has now, and unless you're dismantling all of that infrastructure, the equipment, the stockpiles permanently, then you're not really getting much'.
She predicted Trump might have trouble getting a weak deal through Congress which was 'already mobilising on the issue'.
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Scottish Sun
14 hours ago
- Scottish Sun
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ONE of Iran's longest-serving prisoners has exposed the disturbing mechanisms the regime uses to put inmates to death. Saeed Masouri, who has spent 25 years behind bars, also revealed how the execution rate has spiralled in the last month in a harrowing letter written behind bars. 5 Saeed Masouri been in jail in Iran for 25 years Credit: NCRI 5 Four Iranian convicts hanging after a public execution in 2007 Credit: AFP 5 Masouri is held in Ghezel Hesar prison in Iran Credit: Iran Human Rights The regime's merciless killing spree has seen at least 176 inmates sent to the gallows in the past month. Insiders told The Sun the shocking spike in executions comes amid a barbaric attempt from leaders to crush dissent and act as a warning against it. Masouri, who was arrested for his affiliation with the resistance unit People's Mojahedin Organization of Iran, has now told of the secret process behind executions. Psychological torture, threats against family and sham trials are all used as tools by the regime to condemn its enemies to death on trumped-up charges. Masouri's emotional letter was smuggled out of the notorious Ghezel Hesar prison in Iran and shared with The Sun from Iran Human Rights Monitor. "It is often said that every criminal act is preceded by criminal preparations, hidden beneath the surface," the 60-year-old wrote in a letter to the UN. "For instance, when an execution is carried out, the inhumane and rights-violating acts that preceded it remain hidden from view. "Formal steps like prosecution, indictment, and trial are mere facades. Every detail, from A to Z, is orchestrated by these security agencies." Masouri told how those accused are hauled into court with a "fabricated case file" to give a smoke screen of a fair and legal procedure. "These so-called 'judges don't even read the actual files," he said. Dad set to be executed in Iran shares powerful audio message blasting regime from behind bars "This is why there is no logical argumentation or credible evidence in the case files, no opportunity for defence (as trials rarely last more than 10 minutes), and no access for lawyers to review the case materials. "Verdicts are predetermined and simply announced. "Empty phrases about 'resolving disputes', 'equality before the law', 'prohibition of injustice', or 'delivering rights to rightful owners' are just lip service. "In reality, defendants are denied the right to a fair defense, and the courts are devoid of justice and even basic adherence to their own laws. "Meanwhile, the stripping of civil rights is carried out to the fullest extent possible." Defendants - and their lawyers - are often even denied access to their own files, making it near impossible to be cleared. Masouri said this is true in the cases of Mehdi Hassani and Behrouz Ehsani, who both face imminent execution. 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'If I'm in prison today and have been sentenced to execution, it is only because I could not tolerate seeing such cruelty and oppression against this nation and against the children of my land and I stood up against oppression. 'They have no evidence against me and they didn't even allow my lawyer to access and study my file so that he could expose the contradictions that exist.' Hassani - who was arrested in September - vowed the regime is 'doomed to perish'. READ MORE HERE "[This allows] the system to coerce forced confessions, such as televised admissions or baseless claims presented as 'documentaries'. "In return, the accused is promised clemency or a reduction in punishment. In this way, the defendant is forced to choose: either confess to lies or face execution. "Lawyers - stripped of any ability to defend their clients - are left to weigh between refusing to participate in injustice and doing something, anything, to save their client's life. "Often, the only path left is for the accused themselves to express remorse, seek forgiveness, or act in whatever way they think may help." But Masouri warned even if inmates decide to "confess" to fabricated charges, it does not put them in the clear. "The accused's family is summoned and threatened: if your loved one does not repent, if they do not write a confession, if they do not seek a pardon - then execution is inevitable, and nothing can stop it," he said. "If the execution happens, the blame lies with them—and with you. "Thus, when families and lawyers are left with no means of defense, they may blame themselves, one another, or even the defendant. 5 Pictures show a man named Balal who was led to the gallows by his victim's family 5 "The government and judiciary, meanwhile, are absolved of any responsibility. It comes amid a staggering rise in executions - which sources told The Sun came as the eyes of the world were on Iran's nuclear talks with the US rather than its human rights record. More than 1,100 state executions have taken place Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei's stooge came to power. According to figures from the National Council of Resistance of Iran (NCRI), that marks more than a 20 per cent increase compared to 2023, when the regime executed 853 Iranians. Hossein Abedini, deputy director of the NCRI offices in the UK, said paranoid rules were hellbent on stamping out repression. He told The Sun: "Executions under the clerical regime contravene all internationally recognised standards and norms of due process and are fundamentally used as a political instrument of repression. "Faced with deep-rooted crises stemming from illegitimacy, corruption, and incompetence, and driven by fear of popular uprisings and nationwide protests, this regime has resorted to increasing executions. 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Daily Mail
a day ago
- Daily Mail
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Reuters
a day ago
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