

Donald Trump had earlier told Fox News station that he had sent a message to Ali Chamenei, Iran's ultimate leader, calling for an agreement. It is to replace what Trump's administration cancelled in May 2018 during his first word in the White home for what was called a run of "maximum pressure".
The American president suggested, without detail, that this issue could rapidly lead to a conflict with Iran, which has since 2018 accelerated uranium production to produce weapons.
“There is not much time left”, Trump said. "We cannot let them to have atomic weapons."
The White home did not print the letter, and the president did not explain whether it suggests that direct action by the U.S. is 1 of the options in dealing with the threat that Iran's atomic weapons would pose — a question that posed a challenge to many administrations.
“We have any interesting days ahead of us, that's all I can say. We are at the conclusion of talks with Iran," said the president of the United States. Trump later added that he was curious in a area with Iran.
"Let's hope we can make a peace agreement," he said. "I'm not talking about strength or weakness, I'm just saying I'd alternatively have a peace agreement than the another one, but the another 1 will solve the problem." Earlier in an interview with Fox News, he discussed a letter that was the first contact of his fresh administration with Iranian leaders.
Further string of article under video material
Iran's slight reaction
Iran immediately presented a disrespectful attitude towards the fresh approach of the American administration. abroad Minister Abbas Aragchi said that his country would not resume talks until the United States withdrew its sanctions policy of "maximum pressure".
During Trump's first term, his administration withdrew from Obama's atomic agreement between Iran and respective countries in which the Iranian government agreed to limit its civilian uranium enrichment programme in exchange for leniency. Last month, the president signed a memorandum restoring the force campaign.
In the meantime Iran has accelerated uranium enrichment to a level akin to atomic weapons. Head of the global Atomic Energy Agency Rafael Mariano Grossi warned that Iran is dangerously close to atomic weapons, claiming that the country already has adequate uranium enriched to a level that can power respective types of atomic weapons.
Public interaction this week besides occurs in a peculiarly tense period between the 2 governments, as US prosecutors claimed last autumn that the Iranian government commissioned Trump's agent to execution in the run-up to the 2024 election, which Iran repeatedly denied.