DUBAI: Iran said on Tuesday the path to nuclear negotiations between Iran and the United States is not closed but US demands for curbs on Iranian ballistic and hypersonic missiles are obstructing prospects for talks.
A sixth round of Iran-US talks was suspended after Israel and the US struck Iranian military and nuclear facilities and Iran retaliated with waves of ballistic and hypersonic missiles against Israel.
“We indeed pursue rational negotiations. By raising issues such as missile restrictions, they set a path that negates any talks,” the secretary of Iran’s Supreme National Security Council, Ali Larijani, said in a post on X.
Western countries claim Iran’s uranium enrichment programme could yield material for an atomic warhead and that it seeks to develop a ballistic missile to carry one.
Iran says its nuclear programme is only for electricity generation and other civilian uses and that it is enriching uranium as fuel for these purposes.
It has denied seeking to create missiles capable of carrying nuclear payloads and says its defence capabilities cannot be open to negotiation in any talks over its atomic programme.
Larijani’s comments follow last week’s launch by France, Germany and Britain of a “snapback mechanism” that could re-impose UN sanctions on Tehran over its nuclear programme.
The three countries have urged Iran to engage in nuclear negotiations with the US, among other conditions, in order to have the imposition of the snapback sanctions delayed for six months.
