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Iran’s Foreign Minister said this on Sunday tehran Now uranium enrichment is not taking place at any site in the country.
Responding to a question from an Associated Press journalist visiting Iran, Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi gave the most direct response yet from an Iranian government regarding its nuclear program. israel and this United States of America‘Bombed its enrichment sites in June.
“Iran has no undeclared nuclear enrichment. All of our facilities are under the safeguards and monitoring of the International Atomic Energy Agency,” Araghchi said. “There is no enrichment at the moment because our facilities – our enrichment facilities – have been attacked.”
Asked what Iran needs to do to continue negotiations with the US and others, Araghchi said Iran’s message on its nuclear program is “clear”.
The foreign minister further said, “Iran’s right to peaceful uses of nuclear technology, including enrichment, is unquestionable.” “We have this right and we will continue to exercise it and we hope that the international community, including the United States, will recognize our rights and understand that this is an inalienable right of Iran and we will never give up our rights.”
The government of Iran issued a three-day visa for an AP reporter to attend a summit with other journalists from major British outlets and other media.
Iran’s Institute of Political and International Studies, affiliated with the country’s Foreign Ministry, hosted the summit. The conference, titled “International Law Under Attack: Aggression and Self-Defense”, included papers from Iranian political analysts offering Tehran’s view of the 12-day war in June, many of which took advantage of the German Chancellor’s comments. Friedrich Merz Praising Israel for doing “the dirty work” in launching its attack.
International relations professor Mohammad Kazem Sajjadpour wrote, “Iran’s defensive response was remarkable, inspiring, historic and, above all, pure.” “How can one possibly compare the dirty actions of Israel with the noble and clean actions of the Iranian nation?”
Images of children killed by Israel during the war were on the walkway outside the summit, which is located inside the Martyr General Qassem Soleimani Building, named after the Revolutionary Guard expeditionary force leader killed in a US drone strike in 2020.
But after the war, Iran finds itself in difficult times. Israel destroyed the country’s air defense systems, potentially leaving the door open to further airstrikes as tensions remain over Tehran’s nuclear program. Meanwhile, economic pressures and social changes are challenging Iran’s Shia theocracy, which has so far shied away from making decisions about whether to enforce its mandatory hijab laws or raise the price of government-subsidized gasoline, both of which have sparked nationwide protests in the past.
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The Associated Press receives support for nuclear security coverage from the Carnegie Corporation of New York and the Outrider Foundation. AP is solely responsible for all content.