The United States sent an Iran proposal for a nuclear contract between Tehran and Washington, a white house was confirmed on Saturday.
Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi said that he was presented “Elements of America’s Contract” by his Omani Countera Badr albusairdi during the short visit to Iranian capital.
Comes after The UN Nuclear Guard report said he said Iran further intensified his production of enriched uranium, key components in the development of nuclear weapons.
On Saturday, the White House Karolin Leavitt said that in Teharanov “best interested in accepting” agreement, adding, “President Trump said that Iran could never get a nuclear bomb.”
Leavitt said that “detailed and acceptable” proposal sent Iran to the American President Donald Trump’s Special envoy Steve Vitkoff.
The American proposal “will appropriately responded in accordance with the principles, national interests and rights of Iran”, Araghchi wrote in KS.
The precise details of the contract are not yet clear.
The proposal follows the report of the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) – which IAA is found now over 400 kilograms of uranium enriched to 60% purity – close to 90% of purity required for uranium for weapons.
This is significantly above the level of purity sufficient for civilian energy and research purposes.
It is enough for about 10 nuclear weapons if it is further refined, making Iran the only non-nuclear state that produces uranium at this level.
The Report to the PMS on the road to the United States, Britain, France and Germany to push that the IAEA Committee of Governors to find Iran a violation of its displacement obligations.
Iran insists that her program is quiet. On Saturday, Iranian state media described the IAEA report as “politically motivated” containing “useless charges”.
Iran said that “implemented appropriate measures” in response to any effort to take against Tehran at the IAEA Governor meeting.
The United States has long tried to limit Iranian nuclear capacity. The talks between the two powers mediated Oman in progress since April.
Both sides expressed optimism during the conversation, but remained divided into key issues – among them, whether Iran can continue enrichment under any future agreement.
Despite the current negotiations between Tehran and Washington, the IAEA report did not offer that Iran slowed his efforts of nuclear enrichment.
Iran produced highly enriched uranium at the rate equivalent to about one nuclear weapon in the last three months, the IAE report was found.
U.S. officials assess that if Iran decides to make a weapon, it could produce weapons material in less than two weeks and potentially build a bomb within a few months.
Iran died long to try to develop nuclear weapons. However, the IAEA said that it could not confirm whether it was still the case because Iran refuses to approve the access to older inspectors and did not answer a long-term question about its nuclear history.
Trump is looking for a new nuclear agreement with Teheran after he has drawn from the previous Nuclear Agreement between Iran and six world powers in 2018. years.
This nuclear contract, known as a common comprehensive action plan or JCPO, was signed in 2015. years of Iran and the United States, China, France, Russia, Germany and Great Britain.
JCPOA wanted to limit and oversee the Iran’s nuclear program in exchange for the sanctions set on the regime in 2010. years due to suspicion that its nuclear program is used for bomb development.
But Donald Trump retreated from the agreement during his first term, claiming that JCPoa was a “bad deal”, because she was not permanent and among other things he did not deal with the ballistic missile program Iran.
Trump then imposed sanctions as part of the “maximum pressure” campaign to force Iran to negotiate a new and extended agreement.
In international years, Tehran existed to limit the Agreement of 2015. in its nuclear program, designed to make it difficult to develop atomic bomb.
Trump previously threatened to bomb the Iranian nuclear plants if diplomacy does not reach an agreement.