America seeks dictation not real talks, Iran’s Foreign Minister says
Iran's Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi, Interview with Khabar Online in Foreign Ministry in Tehran, November 20, 2025
Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi said on Thursday that the United States has persistently pushed for negotiations with Iran on terms amounting to surrender, both before and after the 12-day June war.
“Even the latest message from the US was that they are ready to close the snapback sanctions issue and the Security Council file, but in exchange for things that are absolutely unacceptable,” Araghchi said in an interview with Khabar Online in Tehran published on YouTube.
Araghchi said President Donald Trump’s letter to Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei shortly before the war explicitly offered two options: war and bloodshed, or direct negotiations to completely eliminate Iran’s nuclear enrichment and ballistic missile programs.
“When one side has maximalist demands and says from the beginning ‘accept them and then come negotiate’ – the same things they couldn’t achieve through military confrontation and now want through negotiation – they say ‘come negotiate’ but these results must come out of it,” he said.
Araghchi repeatedly accused the US of demanding the same maximalist outcomes through talks that it failed to achieve militarily, describing the approach as dictation rather than genuine give-and-take.
“Now our conclusion is not that America seeks real negotiation. They seek to achieve demands that are not only undesirable for us but harmful to our interests. Especially after this war, we cannot negotiate about our defense capabilities. We cannot negotiate to reduce missile range – there is no greater betrayal,” he added.
Iran’s top security official Ali Larijani said in September Washington has demanded Iran halt all uranium enrichment and curb its missile program.
“On enrichment – we spent 20 years, endured war and time, and before and during the war lost nuclear scientists. Now come and say zero enrichment? No one would accept such a thing," Araghchi said.
‘Witkoff could not sell it’
Araghchi said indirect Oman talks reached mutually acceptable solutions three times, but Trump’s envoy Steve Witkoff could not convince the administration in Washington.
“The thinking Trump has – and early in his term he said peace through strength, through force. Previous administrations said peace through diplomacy, but he said diplomacy through force,” he added.
Iran and the US held 5 rounds of indirect talks in Oman in April and May. The 6th round was scheduled but was cancelled due to Israel's surprise attack on Iran in June.
The strikes killed senior nuclear scientists along with hundreds of military personnel and civilians. Iranian counterattacks killed 32 Israeli civilians and an off-duty soldier.
Joining the conflict, the United States attacked three Iranian nuclear sites and Iran responded with missile attacks on a US airbase in Qatar before US President Donald Trump enforced a ceasefire.
“I repeatedly said you can hit buildings and facilities but not knowledge and will. That’s why he (Trump) says come negotiate – says come sign that you won’t enrich,” Araghchi said. “Their goals went beyond nuclear attack. But with our resistance they didn’t achieve them and won’t in future.”
‘Dictation not negotiation’
Asked what happened in New York alongside the UN General Assembly – where a meeting was reportedly planned but did not take place – Araghchi said it was due to White House preconditions.
“Our mediator was Rafael Grossi (IAEA Director General) and he was very eager to play a positive role. He told us Mr. Witkoff is very satisfied provided we negotiate directly – that Witkoff, I and Mr Grossi sit and negotiate,” he said.
“We were on the way to the airport when Mr. Witkoff messaged: my mandate for negotiation is ‘first accept this, then come negotiate; otherwise I won’t come to that meeting’. I told him everyone negotiates first then agrees – you want me to agree then negotiate? I used the phrase and said this is dictation,” Araghchi added.
Iranian government spokeswoman Fatemeh Mohajerani said last month that Iran had proposed a meeting in New York, but the US side did not attend due to preconditions.
“In New York again Grossi and the Europeans tried to make it happen and Witkoff said he would come, but my mandate is the same – if you accept I come. We said no,” Araghchi said.
'Dispute with IAEA'
Asked what will happen in Iran’s relations with the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA), Araghchi said there is a serious dispute over inspecting attacked sites.
“We are still a Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT) member. We don’t say we won’t cooperate with the Agency. We currently still have cooperation with the Agency but regarding places not attacked, like Bushehr nuclear power plant,” Araghchi said.
“The Agency must clarify how inspection of a facility that was attacked works. Because there is no precedent. That they attack and then the Agency reports the extent of damage – that can’t be. Plus it’s dangerous: radiation danger and unexploded bombs danger exist,” he added.
The interview was conducted hours before the vote at the IAEA Board of Governors, which adopted a Western-backed resolution demanding greater transparency from Tehran.
“The resolution they raised against us at the Agency is very bad. But if passed it makes work with the Agency harder. Unfortunately it’s the West pushing the hard path, not us,” he said.
The resolution, adopted on Thursday and submitted by the United States, Britain, France and Germany, urges Iran to give the Agency access and information about its nuclear program.
In a separate interview with The Economist published on Thursday, Araghchi said any negotiations should be in a balanced setting. “We are ready to go for a deal, but for a fair and balanced deal, not a one-sided deal.”
The US Department of the Treasury on Thursday imposed broad new sanctions on what it described as a network helping Iran evade restrictions on its petroleum exports and fund illicit activities.
The Office of Foreign Assets Control (OFAC) added more than 50 individuals, companies, vessels, and aircraft to its Specially Designated Nationals (SDN) list, focusing on front companies and shipping entities linked to Iran's Sepehr Energy Jahan Nama Pars Company — a key oil broker — and the already-sanctioned Mahan Air.
“Today’s action continues Treasury’s campaign to cut off funding for the Iranian regime’s development of nuclear weapons and support of terrorist proxies,” Secretary of the Treasury Scott Bessent said in a statement.“Disrupting the Iranian regime’s revenue is critical to helping curb its nuclear ambitions.”
Among the designated individuals are Singapore-based Fadzlon Bin Ahmad and his son Muhammad Danial Bin Fadzlon, who managed covert payments for Iranian oil, according to the Treasury announcement.
Several Iranian nationals directly tied to Mahan Air and Sepehr Energy operations were also added to the list, including Mohammad Reza Moaref Jahromi, Mohammad Mahdi Maghfoori, Ahmad Ghaedi, Hamidreza Heidari, Sayyed Mojtaba Hosseini, and Kaveh Rostami Zahabi.
Carriers and companies
UAE-based ship management firms including Alsafeenah Althahabya, Deep Current Shipping, and Mars Investment, as well as Singapore shipping entities Anbo Shipping and Strasselink, were designated.
Indian firm RN Ship Management and a newly established carrier, Yazd International Airways Company, which the treasury said was a front company for previously designated Mahan Air, were sanctioned as well.
A series of shadow-fleet oil and LPG tankers flying flags of convenience (Panama, Comoros, Cameroon, Palau, Gambia) were sanctioned for transporting Iranian petroleum products. Seven additional aircraft operated by Mahan Air were also designated.
Treasury officials say the action disrupts critical revenue streams Iran uses to fund proxies and destabilize the region, closing loopholes exploited through UAE, Singapore, and India-based facilitators.
The sanctions were announced the same day the IAEA Board of Governors passed a resolution demanding Iran provide urgent access and information on its enriched uranium stocks and bombed nuclear sites.
An Iranian–American woman is being held in incommunicado detention in Tehran after her arrest upon arrival at Imam Khomeini Airport in September, according to Norway-based rights group Hengaw.
The woman, identified as Afarin Mohajer, normally lives in Los Angeles and has been held in the women’s ward of Evin Prison, the group said.
Hengaw said security forces detained Mohajer on September 29 after she landed in Tehran and transferred her directly to Evin Prison, where she has had no access to due process and her legal status remains unclear.
US-based rights group the Human Rights Activists News Agency (HRANA) also reported her arrest, adding that there is no information about the charges against her.
“The Islamic Republic of Iran has a long record of detaining dual nationals and using them as leverage in foreign policy disputes,” Hengaw said.
“There are growing concerns that Mohajer may become the latest victim of this practice, often described as hostage diplomacy,” the rights group added.
More arrests
In August, The New York Times reported, citing rights groups and lawyers, that Iran is holding at least four Iranian–American citizens, including two individuals arrested after Iran’s June war with Israel.
Hostage Aid Worldwide, a nonprofit that aids families of detainees, was quoted as saying it remains in contact with the detainees’ friends and relatives, and that all four had traveled to Iran from the United States to visit family.
The report cited two Iranian officials as saying that two of the detainees were arrested as part of a crackdown on suspected operatives linked to Israel and the United States.
Over recent years, Iran has repeatedly detained foreign and dual nationals, including US citizens and Iranian–Americans, on broad national-security or espionage charges, a practice rights groups have condemned for its lack of transparency and unclear legal proceedings.
One such case involved Iranian–American businessman Siamak Namazi, who was held in Evin Prison from 2015 until his release in 2023, with his detention cited as part of a larger prisoner-swap deal between Iran and the United States.
Iran’s foreign minister said an accord it reached with the UN nuclear watchdog is now invalid after the agency’s 35-member Board of Governors adopted a Western-backed resolution demanding greater transparency from Tehran.
The resolution demanded Iran allow international verification of its enriched uranium stockpile and access to atomic sites hit in June by US and Israeli strikes.
“Today, in an official letter to the Director-General of the Agency, it was announced that this understanding is no longer valid and is considered terminated," Abbas Araghchi said on Thursday.
He was referring to an interim agreement signed between Tehran and the International Atomic Energy Agency in Cairo in September aimed at eventually resuming inspections of sites stricken by the attacks.
"With this action of theirs and their disregard for Iran’s interactions and goodwill, these countries have damaged the agency’s credibility and independence and are causing disruption in the process of the agency’s interactions and cooperation with Iran," Abbas Araghchi said.
The resolution, adopted on Thursday and submitted by the United States, Britain, France and Germany, urges Iran to give the agency access and information about its nuclear program, Reuters reported, citing diplomats.
The measure passed with 19 votes in favor, three against and 12 abstentions, the Reuters report added citing diplomats. Russia, China and Niger voted against it.
Reuters cited the diplomats as saying the resolution demands that Iran inform the agency without delay of the status of its enriched-uranium stock and the condition of its atomic sites that were bombed in June.
"Iran must ... provide the agency without delay with precise information on nuclear material accountancy and safeguarded nuclear facilities in Iran, and grant the agency all access it requires to verify this information," said the draft resolution text submitted to the board and cited by Reuters.
Iran’s foreign ministry spokesperson Esmail Baghaei branded the move “a clear misuse of an international body" to advance the interests of the United States and its allies.
“Neither in the resolution nor in the statements of the three European countries and the United States is there the slightest reference to the fact that Israel and the United States attacked Iran’s nuclear facilities in June,” he told Iran's state broadcaster on Thursday.
“The reason for the cessation of the agency’s inspections and the reduction of Iran’s cooperation has been nothing other than this illegal action by the United States and Israel,” he added.
The UN General Assembly’s Third Committee adopted a resolution on Wednesday condemning Iran’s human rights record, in a move praised by the UN rapporteur on rights on the country.
The resolution passed with 79 votes in favor, 28 against and 63 abstentions.
According to the text, it “condemned in the strongest terms the alarming and significant increase in and the sustained and extensive use of the application of the death penalty” in Iran.
Many executions, it added, were carried out without fair trials, in secrecy or on the basis of “forced confessions” obtained from detainees.
The resolution also raised concerns about transnational repression by Iranian authorities.
Iran carried out “repressive activities” aimed at harming, silencing and intimidating critics of the government, including human rights defenders, journalists and dissidents, the text continued, asserting that some individuals “were targeted overseas by transnational repression.”
It said Iranian authorities used digital targeting, including online harassment, surveillance and intimidation, adding that authorities also relied on physical force and other means, including threats and coercion, against individuals abroad.
Iranian officials targeted family members inside Iran through “surveillance, harassment and intimidation”, it asserted, as a way to pressure critics overseas.
Victims, survivors and families seeking accountability, including those linked to the 2022 protests, faced harassment as well.
The committee also expressed “serious concern” about Iran’s treatment of women and girls. It referred to the continuing enforcement of compulsory veiling laws and described them as discriminatory policies that undermined fundamental rights.
“I’m pleased to see strong condemnation of the alarming use of the death penalty... and the call for transparency in death penalty practices (in Iran),” UN’s Special Rapporteur on human rights in Iran, Mai Sato, said in a post on X.
"Pleased to see transnational repression included in the resolution," she added.
Sato said Iran has executed over 1200 individuals in the first 10 months of the year.
Iran has asked Saudi Arabia to help persuade the United States to restart nuclear talks, Reuters reported citing two regional sources with knowledge of the matter.
A day before Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman met US President Donald Trump in Washington, Iranian President Masoud Pezeshkian sent him a letter saying Iran “does not seek confrontation” and remains open to resolving the nuclear dispute through diplomacy if its rights are guaranteed, the Reuters report cited the sources as saying.
Earlier on Monday, Saudi state news agency SPA reported that Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman received a letter from Iranian President Masoud Pezeshkian, a day before the crown prince traveled to the United States for talks with President Donald Trump.
SPA did not provide any further details about the letter or say whether it was connected to the US trip.
Iran’s Foreign Ministry spokesperson Esmaeil Baghaei on Wednesday said the letter was “purely bilateral,” while Riyadh has not commented.
US talks with Tehran over its disputed nuclear program began earlier this year with a 60-day ultimatum.
On the 61st day, June 13, Israel launched a surprise military campaign which was capped with US strikes on June 22 targeting key nuclear sites in Esfahan, Natanz and Fordow.
The Reuters report comes after US President Donald Trump said on Tuesday he seeks a deal with Iran and believes Tehran does too, speaking alongside Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman who said he would try to help Tehran and Washington reach a deal.
"I think they very badly want to make a deal. I am totally open to it, and we're talking to them, and we start a process," Trump said.
The crown prince said he was ready to help Iran and the United States reach a deal that would also benefit the Middle East.
"I will be working closely together on the (Iran) issue, and we will do our best to help to reach a deal between America and Iran," he said.
Earlier on Thursday, the UN nuclear watchdog’s 35-member Board of Governors approved a resolution submitted by the United States, Britain, France and Germany calling on Iran to promptly clarify the status of its enriched uranium and the condition of atomic sites hit in June by US and Israeli strikes.