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The US has sent Iran a nuclear transaction between Tehran and Washington, the White House confirmed on Saturday.
Iran’s Foreign Minister Abbas Arakhchi said he had been handed “transaction elements in the United States” by his colleague, Ana Badra Albusoidi during a short visit to the Iran’s capital.
It comes after In the UN Nuclear Caler report Iran further strengthened the production of enriched uranium, a key component in the manufacture of nuclear weapons.
White House press secretary Caroline Levit said that on Saturday, in Tehran, “the best interest to accept” the transaction, adding: “President Trump has made it clear that Iran could never get a nuclear bomb.”
Levitus said that the “detailed and acceptable” proposal was sent by US Special Envoy Donald Trump Steve Witco.
Arahchi wrote on the US proposal “,” writes on X.
The exact details of the transaction are not yet understood.
The proposal stems from the report of the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA), – noticed by the BBC – in which Iran now has more than 400 kg of uranium, enriched to 60% clean – close to the cleanliness of 90% required for uranium weapons.
This is much higher than the level of cleanliness sufficient for civilian nuclear energy and scientific purposes.
This is enough for about 10 nuclear weapons, when even more sophisticated, making Iran the only, no nuclear armed condition that produces uranium at this level.
Iran has long said that her program is peaceful.
The US has long sought to limit Iran’s nuclear capacity. Negotiations between two of the Omani are held since April.
Both sides expressed optimism during the negotiations, but remain divided into key issues – the main thing among them, whether Iran can continue enrichment in accordance with any future agreement.
Despite the constant negotiations between Tehran and Washington, the IAEA report has not offered any signs that Iran has slowed down its nuclear enrichment efforts.
Over the past three months, Iran has produced highly enriched uranium at a rate equivalent to about one nuclear weapon per month.
US officials believe that when Iran decides to make a weapon, it can create weapons materials in less than two weeks and potentially build a bomb for months.
Iran has long denied that he is trying to develop nuclear weapons. However, the IAEA stated that it could not confirm whether it was still so because Iran refuses to provide access to senior inspectors and did not answer many years of questions about its nuclear history.
Trump is looking for a new nuclear agreement with Tehran after the US exit from the previous nuclear agreement between Iran and the six world states in 2018.
This nuclear transaction, known as a joint comprehensive action plan or JCPOA, was signed in 2015 by Iran and the USA, China, France, Russia, Germany and the UK.
JCPOA sought to limit and monitor the Iran’s nuclear program in return for lifting sanctions that were located in 2010 about the suspicion that its nuclear program is used to develop a bomb.
But Donald Trump abandoned the transaction during his first term in office, saying that JCpoa was a “bad deal” because it was not permanent and did not turn to Iran’s ballistic missile program, among other things.
Then Trump again imposed US sanctions as part of the maximum pressure campaign to force Iran to negotiate a new and expanded agreement.
In the implicit years, Tehran has steadily exceeded the 2015 agreement in its nuclear program aimed at making it more complicated for the development of a nuclear bomb.
Previously, Trump threatened to bomb Iran’s nuclear facilities if diplomacy could not reach the deal.