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European snapback move will destroy credibility, Iran FM says

Sep 26, 2025, 08:40 GMT+1

The European Troika’s move to trigger the snapback mechanism will inflict lasting damage on Europe’s credibility, said Iran’s foreign minister in an article published Wednesday by The Jakarta Post.

The minister wrote that the United States violated the 2015 nuclear deal by withdrawing in 2018, while Britain, France, and Germany failed to meet their commitments. Countries that undermine agreements, he said, cannot claim their benefits and added that supporting US strikes on Iranian nuclear facilities has further eroded Europe’s position.

He pointed to a recent IAEA agreement mediated by Egypt as evidence of Iran’s continued pursuit of diplomacy.

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Iran’s parliament to review lawmakers’ call for nuclear weapons

Sep 26, 2025, 08:31 GMT+1

Iran’s parliament will review a letter from MPs urging Iran to build nuclear weapons Deputy Speaker Ali Nikzad said on Friday.

“In the doctrine of the Islamic Republic, the production of an atomic bomb has never been raised and we pursue nuclear energy for its benefits in areas such as water transfer, power generation, agriculture and medicine,” Nikzad added.

The letter on building a bomb will be considered on Sunday, he said.

70 MPs sent a letter on September 22, requesting a change to the Supreme Leader’s earlier fatwa and urging the state to build and retain atomic weapons as a form of deterrence.

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Iranian lawmaker calls snapback a tool of US allies

Sep 26, 2025, 08:08 GMT+1

An Iranian parliamentarian dismissed the snapback sanctions mechanism as serving European powers on behalf of Washington.

“The snapback is a servile tool of three European powers for the United States, which begged for a ceasefire in the 12-day war after its defeat,” Ali Shirinzad said on Friday.

UN says diplomacy with Iran remains possible

Sep 26, 2025, 07:40 GMT+1

Talks with Iran remain feasible, said the United Nations, with Secretary-General António Guterres’s spokesman framing diplomacy as the only dependable path.

“There is still an opportunity for diplomacy with Iran,” said UN spokesman Stéphane Dujarric in an interview with Iran International.

By addressing Iran and the conflict together, the UN underlined its commitment to diplomatic avenues even as political divisions complicate prospects for negotiation.

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Swiss president offers to host renewed nuclear talks with Iran

Sep 26, 2025, 07:36 GMT+1

Bern is ready to host renewed negotiations between the Islamic Republic and European states should talks resume, Switzerland’s president told Iran's President Masoud Pezeshkian in New York.

Pezeshkian met the leaders of Bolivia, Finland, and Switzerland on Wednesday on the sidelines of the UN General Assembly.

“If the nuclear talks are revived, Switzerland can provide the venue,” the Swiss president Karin Maria Keller-Sutter said.

The meetings came as new US restrictions confined the Iranian delegation’s movements in New York more tightly than in past years. Iran’s ambassador to the UN has since written to Secretary-General Antonio Guterres to protest the measures.

Russia, China seek UN vote to delay sanctions on Iran

Sep 25, 2025, 22:26 GMT+1

Russia and China have asked the UN Security Council to vote on a draft resolution on Friday that would delay the reinstatement of international sanctions on Iran by six months, Reuters reported citing diplomats.

Iran and European powers held last-ditch talks in New York on Tuesday to try to prevent the revival of UN sanctions on Tehran, though diplomats on both sides cautioned that chances of success remain slim.

Last week, a UN Security Council resolution on whether to permanently lift UN sanctions on Iran was voted down.

All UN sanctions on Iran will be reimposed at 8PM Eastern time on Friday (0000 GMT Saturday) after the E3 — Germany, France and Britain — triggered a 30-day process accusing Tehran of violating the 2015 nuclear deal aimed at preventing it from developing nuclear weapons.

The E3 have offered to delay deadline by six months if Tehran agrees to resume talks with Washington and cooperate with UN nuclear watchdog.

French President Emmanuel Macron said he pressed his Iranian counterpart Masoud Pezeshkian on the E3’s three non-negotiable demands during their meeting on the sidelines of the UN General Assembly on Wednesday.

The demands, he said, include full access for International Atomic Energy Agency inspectors in Iran, transparency on enriched uranium stockpiles and the immediate resumption of negotiations.

Pezeshkian said a "definitive solution" was possible after talks with the French president. But on Thursday, he warned that Iran is fully prepared to face any scenario and would adjust its policies if UN sanctions are reinstated.

UN spokesperson Stéphane Dujarric told Iran International on Thursday that the window for diplomacy was still open.

"I think it is important that the Islamic Republic as well as the Europeans and the US seize the moments, the few days or hours that are left to try to work for a diplomatic solution to the Iranian nuclear issue," he said.

Earlier this week, Iran’s Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei, who holds ultimate authority on Iranian policy, ruled out talks with the United States, saying they would lead to a “dead end.”