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Iran's Foreign Minister will meet IAEA Chief ahead of nuclear talks

Iran's Foreign Minister?Abbas Araqchi has said that he will be meeting the UN chief nuclear watchdog on Monday ahead of U.S.Iran nuclear talks. The two countries are attempting to resolve their disagreement over 'Tehran’s nuclear program' and avoid conflict in light of 'U.S. Warships are deploying to the Middle East. Both sides held indirect discussions in Oman earlier this month.

"I'm in Geneva with real solutions to reach a fair and equitable agreement. Araqchi told X that submission is the only thing on the table.

Washington wants to broaden the scope of discussions to include non-nuclear topics like Iran's stockpile of missiles, but Tehran insists it will only discuss curbs to its nuclear program in exchange for relief from sanctions and refuses to accept zero uranium enrichment.

TEHRAN SEEKS RELIEF FROM SANCTIONS

Majid Takht Ravanchi, Iran's Deputy Foreign Minister, told the BBC that "the ball is in America's court" to prove they are serious about a deal. U.S. officials said that the U.S. had sent a second aircraft to the Middle East, and was preparing for a possible sustained military campaign in the event the talks fail. The Iranian civil defence organization held a chemical defense drill on Monday in the Pars Special Economic Energy Zone in southern Iran to improve preparedness for possible chemical incidents. Iran-U.S. talks had been stalled for months before the U.S. joined Israel to strike Iranian nuclear sites. Washington demanded that Tehran give up enrichment on Iranian soil, which it viewed as a path to an Iranian nuke weapon. Iran claims its nuclear program is solely for civilian uses and is prepared to allay concerns about nuclear weapons by "building confidence that enrichment will remain for peaceful purposes."

Araqchi has said that he will be meeting with the head of the International Atomic Energy Agency, Rafael Grossi, on Monday for "deep technical discussions".

IAEA SEESKS CLEARANCE ON ENRICHED URANUM The IAEA has been urging Iran to explain what happened to the 440 kg (970 lbs) of highly-enriched uranium it had after Israeli and U.S. strikes, and to allow full inspections to resume. This includes?inspections at three key sites bombed last June: Natanz Fordow and Isfahan. Benjamin Netanyahu, Israeli Prime Minister, said that he had told Donald Trump in the past week that any U.S. agreement with Iran would include dismantling 'Iran's nuclear?infrastructure and not only stopping the enrichment process.

Netanyahu is skeptical of any deal, but it must include the removal of enriched material from Iran. He said: "There will be no capability of enrichment - that is, not just stopping the process but also dismantling all the infrastructure and equipment which allows enrichment to begin with." Reporting by Dubai Newsroom and Steven Scheer, Jerusalem; Writing by Michael Georgy, Editing by Sharon Singleton

(source: Reuters)