Iran Demands Compensation From US Before Nuclear Talks Can Resume
Authored by Dave DeCamp via AntiWar.com,
Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi has told the Financial Times that Iran wants compensation from the US for damages incurred during the 12-Day War and guarantees that it wonât be attacked again before resuming nuclear negotiations.
“They should explain why they attacked us in the middle ofââŠânegotiations, and they have to ensure that they are not going to repeat that [during future talks],” Araghchi said. “And they have to compensate [Iran for] the damage that they have done.”

The Iranian diplomat didnât specify what sort of compensation Iran was seeking, but the US does have the ability to release billions in frozen Iranian funds.
Itâs unlikely that the Trump administration would go for anything like that since it has been imposing fresh sanctions on Iran, continuing the so-called âmaximum pressureâ campaign.
Araghchi said that âanti-negotiation feelingsâ were very high within Iran since Israel launched the war under the cover of previous US-Iran talks.
âPeople are telling me, âDonât waste your time anymore, donât be cheated by themââŠâif they come to negotiations itâs only a cover-up for their other intentions,â he said.
While the US and Iran havenât engaged in talks since the war, Araghchi said he has exchanged messages with US Middle East envoy Steve Witkoff. Araghchi said that his message to Witkoff has been that there needs to be a âwin-winâ deal and that the US needs to show real âconfidence-buildingâ measures.
âThe road to negotiation is narrow but itâs not impossible. I need to convince my hierarchy that if we go for negotiation, the other side is coming with real determination for a win-win deal,â he said.
The US has also shown no sign that itâs willing to give Iran assurances that it wonât be attacked again, since President Trump has repeatedly threatened to bomb the country again if it restarts its nuclear enrichment program. Araghchi reaffirmed that Tehran wouldnât agree to a deal that doesnât allow it to enrich uranium at low levels.
âWe can negotiate, they can present their argument and we will present our own argument,â Araghchi said. âBut with zero enrichment, we donât have a thing,â Araghchi.
He also reaffirmed that Iran didnât want a nuclear bomb and would continue to abide by a 2003 fatwa from the Iranian Supreme Leader that prohibited the production of nuclear weapons.
Tyler Durden
Sun, 08/03/2025 – 12:50

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