West seeking Moscow, Beijing exclusion from Iran’s nuclear talks, says Russia envoy

Russian Ambassador to Iran Alexey Dedov said West seeks to exclude Moscow and Beijing from the process of nuclear talks with Tehran.
News ID: 5988
Publish Date: 12 February 2025

 

TABNAK, Feb 12: “We hope that the negotiations on the nuclear agreement with Iran will continue in the format of the 5+1 group, because according to available information, unfortunately, Western countries are trying to exclude Russia and China from this process,” he said in an interview with Ria Novosti.

 

“We have not been and will not be mediators (on Iran’s nuclear talks), we are directly participating in this process,” he said when asked whether Russia has been mediating in nuclear talks.

 

“This process began in the early 2000s, when the format of "Iran on the one hand and P5+1 on the other" was formed; the five permanent members of the UN Security Council plus Germany is Iran's negotiating party in this framework. Accordingly, the Russian Federation has been in this framework from the very beginning,” Dedov said.

 

Referring to the West's intention to remove Russia and China from nuclear talks process, he said: "These negotiations will never achieve its objectives without Moscow and Beijing, and will not yield results. In other words, we are support maintaining this format of P5+1 on the one hand and Iran on the other side."

 

U.S. President Donald Trump made shocking statements on Saturday, suggesting in remarks to an American media outlet that he would first attempt to secure a deal requiring extreme military concessions from Iran, but if unsuccessful, he would "bomb the hell” out of the country.

"I would like a deal done with Iran on non-nuclear. I would prefer that to bombing the hell out of it,” Trump allegedly said to New York Post. 

Trump further commented, "They don’t want to die. Nobody wants to die," in what appeared to be an attempt to justify what observers are labeling as bullying.  

Last week, the President signed a presidential memorandum that accused Iran of “destabilizing behavior” in West Asia and beyond. The directive’s stated goal is to bring Iran’s oil exports to “zero” through renewing the so-called maximum pressure campaign. 

The maximum pressure campaign was first introduced in 2018 after Trump, during his first term, announced Washington’s official withdrawal from the 2015 nuclear deal known as the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action (JCPOA). The subsequent campaign included the re-imposition and intensification of anti-Iran sanctions that had been removed under the JCPOA in exchange for limits on Tehran’s nuclear activities. 

Iran made significant nuclear advancements after Trump left the pact. Analysts say Washington is not really worried about Iran’s development of nuclear weapons, rather it is hoping to force Iran to make concessions in regards to its missile program and regional alliances. 

In addition to closing off its nuclear sites, Trump allegedly wants Iran to get rid of its mid-range and long-range missiles, dismantle a big part of its ballistic arsenal, and cut ties with Resistance forces in the region. The president has reportedly told Tehran that he would only consider removing sanctions once Iranian officials have taken all those steps. 

 

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