Newsletter
Newsletter Support JNS

Washington, Tehran signal willingness to talk; sanctions, nuclear program at issue

“We will work with them in any way we can, but they can’t have a nuclear weapon,” said U.S. President Donald Trump. “They can’t be testing ballistic missiles.”

U.S. President Donald Trump. Credit: Screenshot.
U.S. President Donald Trump. Credit: Screenshot.

The Trump administration has signaled a willingness to negotiate with Iran, which has said lately that it’s willing to talk only if U.S. sanctions on Tehran are lifted.

“We will work with them in any way we can, but they can’t have a nuclear weapon,” said U.S. President Donald Trump during a Cabinet meeting on Tuesday. “They can’t be testing ballistic missiles.”

The United States withdrew from the 2015 Iran nuclear deal in May 2018, reimposing sanctions lifted under it, in addition to enacting new financial penalties on the regime.

U.S. Secretary of State Mike Pompeo echoed Trump’s words:“Iranians, for the first time, are saying they are willing to negotiate their missile program.”

However, Iranian Foreign Minister Javad Zarif said in an NBC News interview broadcasted on Monday, “Once those sanctions are lifted, then ... the room for negotiation is wide open.”

“It is the United States that left the bargaining table,” he added. “And they’re always welcome to return.”

The move would reverse a decision by the Central American nation two decades ago to move its Israeli embassy to Tel Aviv.
Israel’s top diplomat said that it is “outrageous” to draw a moral equivalence between Hamas leaders and Israeli citizens.
The U.S. administration expects “conversation to continue” on Chinese revenue and dual-use exports benefiting Tehran, a senior U.S. official said before meetings in China.
“It’s a glaring double standard,” the New Jersey Democratic congressman, who is Jewish, wrote in the “New York Times.”
“The targeting of U.S. service members and partners will not go unanswered,” the U.S. State Department said.
One of six detectives to be awarded by the ADL told JNS of New York City’s recent changes to hate crime reports that “you can’t have, ‘Ok, this is a robbery and this is a ‘reported’ robbery.”