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‘Not too late to reverse course’, Iran FM tells US President Trump

‘Not too late to reverse course’, Iran FM tells US President Trump

Iranian Foreign Minister Seyed Abbas Araghchi. -- File Photo: X via @araghchi

ISLAMABAD: Iranian Foreign Minister Seyed Abbas Araghchi, while stating US President Donald Trump “entered promising to put an end to Netanyahu's bamboozling of Obama and Biden”, stressed “it’s not too late to reverse course


In a post on X on Monday, the Iranian top diplomat said, “Iran did not kill diplomacy. Those who blew up the negotiating table did.” 

“Israel targeted diplomacy because its real fear is the failure of its ‘Iran Demonization Project’”, he added.

Araghchi said, “POTUS entered office promising to put an end to Netanyahu's bamboozling of Obama and Biden. It's not too late to reverse course.”


‘Thoroughly debunked’ 

The Iranian foreign minister said, “In the past 48 hours, the heinous lie that the unlawful Israeli and US bombing of Iran was motivated by an imminent nuclear threat has been thoroughly debunked by 


- The International Atomic Energy Agency Chief, who has explicitly stated that Iran "is not and was not" developing nuclear weapons. 


- My Omani counterpart, H.E. AlBusaidi, an intermediary trusted by both Iran and the U.S., who has made clear that there was never any Iranian "nuclear threat".” 


'Stronger than before'

Earlier, Iran said on Sunday that it would rebuild nuclear sites damaged by Israeli and US strikes "stronger than before", as mediator Oman urged Tehran and Washington to revive stalled diplomacy, according to AFP.


US President Donald Trump has said the strikes obliterated Iran's nuclear program, but the full extent of the actual damage remains unknown.


Iranian President Masoud Pezeshkian, in a visit to the country's nuclear organization, said Tehran "will build (the destroyed sites) stronger than before".


‘Not be set back’

"By destroying buildings... we will not be set back," he said in a video posted to his official website, adding that Iranian scientists still had the necessary nuclear know-how.


Pezeshkian did not elaborate. In similar remarks in February before the strikes, he said Tehran would rebuild its sites if they came under attack.

Israel launched an unprecedented bombing campaign against Iran in June, kicking off a 12-day war that saw it target nuclear and military facilities -- as well as residential areas -- and kill many top scientists.


Iran retaliated with ballistic missile barrages aimed at Israel.


‘Serious and severe’

Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi said in July, after the United States announced a halt in fighting, that the damage in Iran was "serious and severe".


Pezeshkian's comments came as Oman, Iran's traditional intermediary, urged the two countries on Saturday to resume talks.


"We want to return to the negotiations between Iran (and) the United States," Omani Foreign Minister Badr Albusaidi said at the IISS Manama Dialogue conference in Bahrain.


Iranian government spokeswoman Fatemeh Mohajerani said Sunday that Tehran "has received messages" on resuming diplomacy, without providing further details.


‘Snapback’ mechanism

Oman hosted five rounds of US-Iran talks this year. Just three days before the sixth round, Israel launched its strikes against Iran's nuclear facilities.


Iran has since faced the return of UN sanctions after Britain, Germany, and France triggered the "snapback" mechanism over Tehran's alleged non-compliance with the 2015 nuclear deal, AFP reported.