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Iran FM: We Received Trump’s Letter, To Counter US Maximum Pressure with Maximum Resistance

Iran FM: We Received Trump’s Letter, To Counter US Maximum Pressure with Maximum Resistance
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By Staff, Agencies

Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi stressed that Iran will not engage in direct talks with the United States unless its national interests are secured and the negotiations are free from pressure and threats.

In statements to Iran Newspaper, Araghchi reaffirmed that his country will not negotiate under "maximum pressure", as such negotiations will not fulfill its demands, stressing that Iran's strategy to counter the maximum pressure policy is "maximum resistance".

The top Iranian diplomat said that the Europeans have previously acted as intermediaries with the United States, and they can do so again.

Earlier on Wednesday, Araghchi confirmed that Iran had received a letter from US President Donald Trump, conveyed by Anwar Gargash, diplomatic advisor to the president of the United Arab Emirates.

According to the official Telegram page of the Foreign Ministry spokesperson, Gargash emphasized the significance of UAE-Iran relations and the need for ongoing dialogue to advance mutual interests, expressing expressed Abu Dhabi’s willingness to enhance cooperation with Tehran across various sectors.

Araghchi further noted that Iranian President Masoud Pezeshkian’s administration remains committed to strengthening ties with regional and neighboring countries.

On Tuesday, Iranian President Masoud Pezeshkian ruled out negotiations with the United States under current circumstances, stating that Tehran will not engage in talks while under threats.

Under this policy, Trump withdrew from the 2015 nuclear deal and reimposed broad sanctions on Iran, while adding new measures.

Meanwhile, Iran’s ambassador to the United Nations firmly rejected accusations by the United States, the United Kingdom, and France regarding Tehran’s cooperation with the International Atomic Energy Agency [IAEA].

During a UN Security Council session on Thursday—convened by the US and its allies to discuss what they described as Iran’s “insufficient” cooperation with the IAEA—Ambassador Amir Saeid Iravani dismissed the claims.

“Washington has openly declared, in its own official documents, that it seeks to weaponize the Security Council as part of its strategy to intensify economic warfare against Iran,” Iravani said. He urged the Council to reject such manipulation and uphold international legal principles.

“This is not a legitimate discussion on non-proliferation—it is a blatant political maneuver and a misuse of the Security Council to advance narrow agendas,” he added, warning that such actions undermine the credibility of the Council.

Iravani categorically rejected the premise of the meeting, emphasizing that the concerns raised by the US and its allies fall within the exclusive jurisdiction of the IAEA and had already been addressed during last week’s IAEA Board of Governors session in Vienna.

He accused Washington and its allies of attempting to interfere in Iran’s constructive engagement with the IAEA, describing it as a continuation of the US' failed “maximum pressure” policy against Tehran.

The envoy stressed that Iran remains one of the most heavily monitored members of the IAEA. “Despite these facts, certain Western countries, particularly the United States, the UK, France, and Germany, have persistently sought to create a false narrative about Iran’s nuclear activities, alleging non-cooperation and military ambitions,” he stated.

“Iran’s nuclear program is peaceful, and it will remain so. We categorically reject Weapons of Mass Destruction, including nuclear weapons,” he reaffirmed, reiterating Tehran’s commitment to non-proliferation.

Iravani also pointed to Western violations of agreements concerning Iran, which he said are consistently ignored. He highlighted that it was the United States that unilaterally withdrew from the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action [JCPOA] in 2018, in direct violation of UN Security Council Resolution 2231, which endorsed the deal.

“It was the United States that re-imposed illegal sanctions, punishing the Iranian people, while the UK, France, and Germany failed to uphold their commitments,” he noted.

The Iranian diplomat also accused Washington of coercing other states into violating Resolution 2231 and criticized the UK for incorporating expired EU sanctions into its domestic law after the JCPOA’s restrictions lapsed in October 2023.

Despite these provocations, Iran exercised “strategic patience” for over a year following the US withdrawal, fully complying with its JCPOA obligations while pursuing diplomatic solutions, according to Iravani.

He clarified that only after exhausting all diplomatic avenues did Tehran begin a phased and reversible response in accordance with Paragraph 26 of the JCPOA, stressing that Iran's actions were legally justified.

“Iran has not violated the JCPOA. Those who abandoned their commitments—first and foremost the United States—bear full responsibility for the current situation,” he asserted.

Iravani reiterated that Iran remains committed to the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty [NPT] and the IAEA’s Safeguards Agreement, dismissing allegations that its nuclear activities had strayed from peaceful purposes.

“The NPT imposes no limits on Iran’s level of uranium enrichment,” he noted, adding that “any restrictions that ever existed were within the JCPOA—an agreement that the United States deliberately sabotaged.”

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