SAEDNEWS: A source close to Iran’s negotiating team on Friday rejected a Saudi media report claiming that Tehran had agreed to transfer part of its enriched uranium stockpiles to a third country, describing the report as inaccurate.
According to Saednews Political Service, Citing Fars News Agency, an informed source close to Iran's negotiating team on Friday rejected a Saudi media report claiming that Tehran had agreed to transfer part of its enriched uranium stockpile to a third country, describing the claim as inaccurate.
Earlier, Al Arabiya reported that Iran had officially agreed to transfer a portion of its uranium reserves to a mutually agreed third country.
The source stated that issues related to Iran's nuclear file are not being discussed at the current stage of negotiations and have been postponed to later phases of the talks.
The source added, “The issue of transferring uranium stockpiles is not on the current negotiation agenda. The United States must first take specific and definitive actions, and both sides must reach clear and final agreements on several fundamental issues.”
The source emphasized that reports claiming Iran had agreed to transfer part of its uranium stockpile to a third country are “incorrect.”
Negotiations between Iran and the United States, aimed at reaching a non-hostility agreement and launching a 60-day negotiation process, had been suspended following U.S. attacks on several commercial vessels in southern Iran and military operations by the Israeli regime in southern Lebanon.